Rabu, 8 Januari 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Even without weight loss, Mediterranean diets may help stave off diabetes

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 07:35 PM PST

January 09, 2014

A new study suggests that eating a Mediterranean diet can not only protect your heart but fend off type 2 diabetes as well. - AFP/Relaxnews pic, January 9, 2014.A new study suggests that eating a Mediterranean diet can not only protect your heart but fend off type 2 diabetes as well. - AFP/Relaxnews pic, January 9, 2014.A new study finds that even if you don't lose weight or boost exercise, following a Mediterranean diet can help prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes.

In the Spanish study, people at risk for heart disease who followed a diet of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, fish, and fats from nuts or olive oil were about 30% less likely to develop diabetes over a four-year period than those who ate a low-fat diet.

The research was a subanalysis of last year's influential Predimed study, involving 7,447 subjects at high risk for cardiovascular disease. Researchers from Universidad de Navarra found that subjects who ate a Mediterranean diet had a 30% greater reduction in the risk of heart attack, stroke, or death from cardiovascular disease than those who ate a low-fat diet. The new paper, published this week in the Annals of Internal Medicine, looked at the development of diabetes among 3,541 subjects who didn't have diabetes at the beginning of the study.

Even just adding olive oil to your diet resulted in a health boost, the study suggests. Participants who added fats from extra-virgin olive oil were 40% less likely to develop diabetes during the study compared with those who followed a low-fat diet.

Recent evidence from Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston also found that middle-aged women who follow a Mediterranean diet may live healthier, longer lives. Scientists evaluated the diets and medical records of 10,670 women and found that after 15 years those women who followed a Mediterranean diet were 40% more likely to survive to age 70 or over without heart disease, diabetes, or other chronic disease. - AFP/Relaxnews, January 9, 2014.

Giraffe, flamingo on menu for ancient Romans

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 06:07 AM PST

January 08, 2014

Ancient Romans dined on giraffes, pink flamingos and exotic spices from as far away as Indonesia, according to a new scientific study of excavations in Pompeii near Naples in southern Italy.

The study of food waste dug up by researchers from the University of Cincinnati in the United States led by archaeologist Steven Ellis found that menus in the city were far richer and more varied than previously thought.

The most used foods found in drains and dumps were grains, fruits, nuts, olives, lentils, local fish and eggs but there was also more exotic fare like salted fish from Spain, or imported shellfish and sea urchins.

A joint of giraffe was found in the drain of one home.

"This is thought to be the only giraffe ever recorded from an archaeological excavation in Roman Italy," Ellis was quoted as saying in a university statement.

Ellis's team has been working on two neighbourhoods of Pompeii, which was covered over by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, for the past 10 years.

The area had around 20 shops, most of which served food and drink and the archaeologists analysed their waste drains as well as nearby latrines and cesspits.

The remains go back as far as the 4th century BC.

Ellis said that Pompeii urbanites had "a higher fare and standard of living" than previously thought and the university said the research was "wiping out the historic perceptions of how the Romans dined". - AFP, January 8, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Tottenham’s Defoe is Toronto bound, say reports

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 02:38 PM PST

January 09, 2014

England striker Jermain Defoe (pic) will leave Tottenham Hotspur and join Major League Soccer's Toronto FC, according to Canadian media reports yesterday.

The stunning move would see 31-year-old Defoe introduced in Toronto on Monday before rejoining Spurs until March 1, when he would officially become part of the North American side just two weeks before its season opener at Seattle, according to the Toronto Star.

Toronto FC has released a series of short promotional videos with the catchphrase "It's a bloody big deal" with Monday's date.

Canada's TSN Sports network reported that Defoe was expected in Canada this weekend to complete the deal for an MLS record transfer fee above $10 million (RM32.7 million) and a salary of about $150,000 a week.

The deal might even be bigger than just Defoe as other media outlets say Toronto is in final talks to also obtain Roma midfielder Michael Bradley, a US international player who might also be unveiled on Monday if the deal is completed.

Bradley, according to the Star, would take a rest before the MLS season begins.

The two together might combine for a $100 million blockbuster deal in a league where teams typically operate with a $3 million salary cap except for designated players such as Defoe would be deemed.

Forbes magazine only valued the entire Toronto FC team at $120 million.

While Toronto has enjoyed a strong following of supporters, the team has yet to reach the MLS playoffs.

Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president Tim Leiweke was the man who signed David Beckham for the Los Angeles Galaxy when he worked with the Anschutz Entertainment Group.

Defoe's signing would bring some of the same spark to the North American league that Beckham's did when he joined the Galaxy, although not nearly as much star power as Beckham enjoyed beyond the football world. - AFP, January 9, 2014.

Negredo fires Manchester City to brink of final

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 02:34 PM PST

January 09, 2014

Manchester City's Alvaro Negredo (right) challenges West Ham United's Joe Cole during their English League Cup semi-final first leg match at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, northern England, yesterday. - Reuters pic, January 9, 2014.Manchester City's Alvaro Negredo (right) challenges West Ham United's Joe Cole during their English League Cup semi-final first leg match at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, northern England, yesterday. - Reuters pic, January 9, 2014.Alvaro Negredo plundered a hat-trick as Manchester City destroyed hapless West Ham United 6-0 at the Etihad Stadium yesterday to all but qualify for the League Cup final.

West Ham had seen a second-string team embarrassed 5-0 at Nottingham Forest in the FA Cup on Sunday, but even the return of several first-team players could not prevent a mauling by City's ruthless forwards in the semi-final first leg.

A smartly taken brace from Negredo and a goal from the marauding Yaya Toure put City 3-0 up, with Negredo completing his hat-trick in the second half before Edin Dzeko sealed victory with two goals of his own.

Manuel Pellegrini's City have now scored 59 goals in their 15 home games to date this season and their place in the final appears a formality ahead of the return leg at Upton Park on January 21.

"It's never finished until the end, but I think that today we have one leg in the final," City manager Pellegrini told Sky Sports.

"For me the most important thing was not to score the six goals, but it was the way that this team must play. It's very important to continue scoring goals, but also it's very important not to concede goals.

"We have to play another game, the second leg, in London and we'll try to continue to play, independent of what we did here today."

For injury-ravaged West Ham, meanwhile, focus will reluctantly return to the fight to haul themselves out of the Premier League relegation zone.

"It's not unique to us, is it? Manchester City have done this to Tottenham and Manchester United," said manager Sam Allardyce.

"We knew they had to have an off night and they didn't. Their finishing was outstanding in every sense of the word.

"We haven't got a fully fit squad and we are in a hole and we need to dig ourselves out."

Allardyce made eight changes to the team thrashed at Forest, handing a debut to new loan signing Roger Johnson, while Toure and Vincent Kompany were among the returning players in a strong City XI.

Speaking ahead of the game, which took place a day after Manchester United lost 2-1 at Sunderland in the other semi-final, Allardyce said that a draw would be an ideal result, but the visitors were quickly overrun.

Samir Nasri had driven a low cross across the face of goal and Javi Garcia had headed wide from a David Silva corner by the time Negredo broke the deadlock in the 12th minute.

It was a goal of arresting simplicity, with Negredo haring onto a raking 60-yard pass from Toure and lashing an impeccable left-foot volley into the bottom-right corner.

After West Ham goalkeeper Adrian saved from first Silva and then Nasri, Negredo made it 2-0 in the 26th minute with a shot into the roof of the net from strike partner Dzeko's through ball.

Toure had given City a scare by limping to the touchline after injuring himself in a slide tackle, but after returning to the fray he added to the hosts' lead with a characteristic driving run followed by a low shot.

Had Dzeko shown more composure, City's half-time lead might have been even greater, but at no point did West Ham threaten to turn the game into a contest.

Allardyce introduced Carlton Cole up front at half-time, but within four minutes City were four goals up as Negredo completed his hat-trick by sweeping home a shot from Silva's deflected pass.

It was the Spaniard's second City hat-trick, after a treble against CSKA Moscow in November, and Dzeko got in on the act in the 60th minute when he converted a low cross from Gael Clichy.

As West Ham's fans took to angrily goading Allardyce, City took their foot off the pedal, but in the 89th minute Aleksandar Kolarov got to the byline and cut the ball back for Dzeko to complete the rout. - AFP, January 9, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


‘Gravity’ leads Britain’s Bafta film nominations

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 02:24 AM PST

January 08, 2014

Space thriller Gravity won 11 Bafta nominations on Wednesday, putting it just ahead of the pack at Britain's top film honours, while 12 Years a Slave and American Hustle were in the running in 10 categories.

Gravity, starring Oscar winners Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, was shortlisted in categories including best film, best actress, best director for Alfonso Cuaron, best sound and visual effects, and outstanding British film.

The nomination for top British film gave Gravity the edge over US rivals in a highly competitive year in which the unflinching slavery drama, 12 Years a Slave, from British director Steve McQueen, is topping many US award lists.

That film is heading the nominations across the Atlantic for the January 12 Golden Globe awards and is a favourite for the Oscars on March 2. Its British lead actor, Chiwetel Ejiofor, is also nominated for the Bafta best actor prize.

Ejiofor, 36, gained recognition as the lead in the 2002 dark crime thriller Dirty Pretty Things but his role in 12 Years a Slave as a free man kidnapped and sold into slavery has thrust him into the limelight, winning him a list of award nominations.

"I continue to be immensely proud of the recognition this film is getting around the world. There is, of course, something particularly special about receiving a Bafta nomination from home," Ejiofor said in a statement.

Other films competing for the Bafta best film award are 1970s con-men caper American Hustle, Somali pirate thriller Captain Phillips, and the heart-tugging adoption drama Philomena.

Of these five films vying for the top prize, all but Philomena are also competing for the best director award with Cuaron running alongside McQueen, David O. Russell for American Hustle and Paul Greengrass for Captain Phillips. The fifth in this field was Hollywood veteran Martin Scorsese for his tale of American greed The Wolf of Wall Street.

Vying for the best actor prize are Christian Bale in American Hustle, Bruce Dern in Nebraska, Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street and Tom Hanks in Captain Phillips.

Veteran British star Judi Dench was one of five women competing for the best actress award. The biggest surprise in that category was that Amy Adams was nominated for American Hustle but Meryl Streep was overlooked for August: Osage County.

The two others vying for best actress are Emma Thompson in Saving Mr. Banks and Cate Blanchett in Woody Allen's tragic comedy Blue Jasmine.

The Baftas have had a patchy record in predicting which films go on to scoop the biggest movie honors, the Oscars, although the main winners in London in the past two years, The Artist and Argo, stormed to best picture victory at the Academy Awards.

The awards ceremony for the Baftas, formally called the EE British Academy Film Awards, takes place in London on February 16.

– Reuters, January 8, 2014.

Gravity leads Britain’s Bafta film nominations

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 02:23 AM PST

January 08, 2014

Space thriller Gravity won 11 Bafta nominations on Wednesday, putting it just ahead of the pack at Britain's top film honours, while 12 Years a Slave and American Hustle were in the running in 10 categories.

Gravity, starring Oscar winners Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, was shortlisted in categories including best film, best actress, best director for Alfonso Cuaron, best sound and visual effects, and outstanding British film.

The nomination for top British film gave Gravity the edge over US rivals in a highly competitive year in which the unflinching slavery drama, 12 Years a Slave, from British director Steve McQueen, is topping many US award lists.

That film is heading the nominations across the Atlantic for the January 12 Golden Globe awards and is a favourite for the Oscars on March 2. Its British lead actor, Chiwetel Ejiofor, is also nominated for the Bafta best actor prize.

Ejiofor, 36, gained recognition as the lead in the 2002 dark crime thriller Dirty Pretty Things but his role in 12 Years a Slave as a free man kidnapped and sold into slavery has thrust him into the limelight, winning him a list of award nominations.

"I continue to be immensely proud of the recognition this film is getting around the world. There is, of course, something particularly special about receiving a Bafta nomination from home," Ejiofor said in a statement.

Other films competing for the Bafta best film award are 1970s con-men caper American Hustle, Somali pirate thriller Captain Phillips, and the heart-tugging adoption drama Philomena.

Of these five films vying for the top prize, all but Philomena are also competing for the best director award with Cuaron running alongside McQueen, David O. Russell for American Hustle and Paul Greengrass for Captain Phillips. The fifth in this field was Hollywood veteran Martin Scorsese for his tale of American greed The Wolf of Wall Street.

Vying for the best actor prize are Christian Bale in American Hustle, Bruce Dern in Nebraska, Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street and Tom Hanks in Captain Phillips.

Veteran British star Judi Dench was one of five women competing for the best actress award. The biggest surprise in that category was that Amy Adams was nominated for American Hustle but Meryl Streep was overlooked for August: Osage County.

The two others vying for best actress are Emma Thompson in Saving Mr. Banks and Cate Blanchett in Woody Allen's tragic comedy Blue Jasmine.

The Baftas have had a patchy record in predicting which films go on to scoop the biggest movie honors, the Oscars, although the main winners in London in the past two years, The Artist and Argo, stormed to best picture victory at the Academy Awards.

The awards ceremony for the Baftas, formally called the EE British Academy Film Awards, takes place in London on February 16.

– Reuters, January 8, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Features

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


The Saudi bull in the Arab china shop

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 05:26 AM PST

BY NICOLA NASSER
January 08, 2014

Obsessed with the "Iran threat" which lead to its warmongering in Syria, Saudi Arabia is acting like a bull in a china shop, wreaking regional havoc in an already Arab and fragile political environment, creating what George Joffe of Cambridge University's Centre of International Studies, last December 30, called the "second Arab cold war" – the first being the Saudi-led cold war with the Pan-Arab Egypt of Gamal Abdul Nasser since the 1960s.

The kingdom now stands almost politically isolated. Its "going it alone" attitude in the Syrian conflict has cornered Saudi Arabia in a self-inflicted foreign policy no-win deadlock, at odds with three super powers, including its strategic US ally as well as Russia and China, in addition to regional heavy weights Iran, Iraq, Egypt and Algeria, all of whom advocate a political settlement of the conflict.

Within the six-member Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (GCC), the kingdom navigates no better.

It is at loggerheads with Qatar over the latter's sponsorship of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) and consequently over the two countries' disagreement over the removal of MB-led Mohammad Morsi's presidency.

Saudi Arabia's hostility to the MB and its support of their removal from power in Egypt have reflected negatively on Saudi-Turkish relations as well, and have had repercussions in Syria, leading to a restructuring of the insurgent political and military competing leaders who claim the representation of the Syrian people: Qatari and Turkish-supported leading figures and organisations were replaced by Saudi loyalists and accordingly, for example, the "Free Syrian Army" has simply disappeared, replaced by the Islamic Front.

In the last GCC summit meeting in Kuwait, the other five members of the GCC, Oman in particular, rejected the kingdom's proposal to develop the "cooperation council" into a confederation.

Despite the Saudi bailing-out of the post-Morsi interim government in Cairo with a few billion US dollars, Egypt doesn't see eye to eye with Riyadh or with Syria, where it joined the political solution advocates, nor on relations with Russia, which Egypt is now reviving to balance its US ties.

According to Wall Street Journal online on January 5, the ensuing situation "is placing the White House in a growing diplomatic quandary as its regional allies fall into competing camps".

The fact that the United States has chosen diplomacy instead of military confrontation with Tehran and Damascus has politically isolated the kingdom, which had hedged its bets on a western military intervention led or blessed by the United States. It feels betrayed by its American strategic ally. For a long time it relied on a long-mistaken understanding that the US marines would be always available as mercenary soldiers ready to fight Saudi wars as long as the wealthy kingdom would pay for it, not aware of the US understanding of the vice versa.

However, instead of maneuvering wisely to backtrack to steer in harmony with the US, the kingdom stubbornly decided to "go it alone".

In an op-ed published by The New York Times on last December 19, Saudi Ambassador to the UK, Prince Nawaf bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, said his country "will go it alone" against Syria and Iran, because it "will not stand idly by" while the US compromises Saudi Arabia's security and "risk[s] the region's stability".

However, "in spite of its great wealth, the kingdom is not able to confront significant threats in its strategic environment on its own," former Iran Coordinator in Israel's National Security Council, Yoel Guzansky, wrote in Haaretz on last December 25, adding that as regards the Saudi "deterrence of and protection from Iran… no other major power is currently interested in or capable of filling the role played by the United States."

As of late this summer, Saudi Arabia had given $400 million in arms and other equipment to Syrian Salafi Jihadists, the Wall Street Journal online reported last December 29.

True, Saudi warmongering over Syria and Iran could abort the Geneva II conference on Syria, scheduled to convene on January 22 in Montreux, Switzerland to wrap up a political settlement, but at the end of the day, the Saudi kingdom is more likely to end up the only loser in the face of a regional and worldwide consensus on political settlement as the only possible exit out of the Syrian conflict.

Logic dictates that Iran should be in and Saudi Arabia out, but the Geneva II guest list includes warmongering Saudi Arabia while excluding Iran, which has been calling from the start for a political solution. Such an arrangement warns of including the only "spoiler-in-chief", in the words of the Assistant Professor of International Studies at Arcadia University, Pennsylvania, Samer N. Abboud, writing in the Qatari www.aljazeera.com on January 5.

US and Russian top diplomats, John Kerry and Sergey Lavrov were scheduled during a meeting ahead of Geneva II to decide on Iran's participation, according to Martin Nesirky, spokesperson for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

There is no way the kingdom could succeed in Syria where a US-led Qatari, Turkish, French and British alliance failed. Saudi former intelligence chief, former ambassador to the US and an influential member of the royal family, Prince Turki bin Faisal Al Saud, admitted their failure when he told CNBC on January 7 that the United States failed in its dealing with the Syrian conflict.

The three-year old conflict in Syria has been somewhat contained within its own borders, but Saudi Arabia's ongoing warmongering threatens to perpetuate the conflict and, more importantly, to spill it over regionally without achieving the Saudi proclaimed goal of changing the regime in Damascus at any cost.

The protracted Syrian conflict is already spilling over into neighbouring countries through the Saudi sectarian agitation and incitement.

In the east, Iraqi officials have already appealed to the Saudi and other GCC governments to stop their intervention in Iraq's internal affairs by arms and political, financial and logistical support to insurgents whose terrorism claimed the lives of some ten thousand overwhelmingly civilian Iraqis in 2013.

West of Syria, "Lebanon is paralyzed right now", General Michel Aoun, leader of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the second largest bloc in Lebanese parliament, told www.al-monitor.com on last December 13. After a two-week power vacuum, a prime minister-designate was nominated last April, but he has yet to form his government. His efforts have reached a dead end. The country has since been administrated by a caretaker government. No breakthrough seems imminent.

Saudi Arabia is the reason. It is exploiting its historical influence with loyalists and allies to prevent any inclusive government. It insists on the exclusion of Hizbullah as a precondition. The dead end polarised the country between pro-Syria and pro-Saudi camps. Riyadh, to guarantee a no-return by its loyalists, has recently fuelled this polarisation with a three billion "gift" over five years to arm the Lebanese army with French weapons in the hope of creating a counterbalance to Hezbullah, thus qualifying Lebanon for a civil war.

Meanwhile the northern and eastern parts of the country have slipped out of the control of the central government in Beirut and became a bastion of a Saudi-supported training camp, safe haven, manpower reservoir and a host of foreign Jihadists, fuelling the Syrian conflict with arms and fighters.

Deterred by the military successes of the official Syrian Arab Army against them and falling back on Lebanon, those "Jihadists" are retaliating with the escalation of suicide bombings inside Lebanon, which are claiming more and more Lebanese civilian lives of all sects.

In the south in Jordan, where the kingdom succeeded for three years to keep balance between its geopolitical links with Syria and its strategic alliance with the US and Saudi Arabia, warnings against a mounting Saudi pressure to change course have been voiced.

For example, former premier and member of the upper house, Ma'arouf al-Bakhit, quoted by www.ammonnews.net on last December 30, warned that the disparity between the US and Saudi approaches to solving the Syrian conflict is pressuring Jordan, which is now facing the "challenge" of the possibility that Saudi Arabia "might act to impose its vision on Jordan", indicating that "Syria no longer views Jordan as neutral" and accuses the kingdom of "hosting a Saudi – Israeli operations room to run military operations in Syria". If Syria decides to act on this accusation, al-Bakhit added, it is "possible" to "move part of war" to "the interior of the kingdom's territory". Al-Bakhit should have cited Lebanon and Iraq as live precedents.

Further away in Russia, the latest terror attacks in Volgograd were interpreted as an integral part of and attributed to the same terror network and mastermind in the Middle East, thus alienating the emerging Russian world polar. Russian media reports have implicated Saudi Arabia as responsible.

Since the so-called "Arab Spring" sprang out in Tunisia three years ago, the Saudi-led GCC monarchies succeeded in defending themselves against the tidal popular protests by a preempting financial bailout (Oman, Bahrain) or by direct military intervention (Bahrain) and by financial, political and indirect, but public nonetheless, military intervention to hijack the burgeoning revolutions in the "republics", which have become more like china shops, either stateless or failed states, breathlessly in a life or death fight against "Islamist" terror organisations, which are armed and financed by none other than this same Saudi-led petrodollar monarchies and sheikhdoms.

This Saudi-led strategy is best manifested in Syria, where it met its first failure. Internal, regional and international consensus on political settlement and anti-terror campaign is gaining momentum to put an end to this strategy. Saudi Arabia has no other option but either to backtrack or being isolated. It either changes course or changes its leadership.

Its warmongering in Syria is portraying the kingdom in public opinion as the regional mastermind of violence and instability, vindicating American accusations fuelled by Israeli incitement, in the aftermath of the terror attacks in US on September 11, 2001 that the Saudi sectarian ideology is an incubator nurturing violence and terror, despite the kingdom's long war against its own Islamist terrorists.

This sectarian ideology is creating a sectarian clash across the Middle East between two theocracies, the "Shiite" theocracy of Iran and the Sunni theocracy of Saudi Arabia, thus blurring the real dividing line of the regional battle between the US-protected Israeli occupation of Arab lands in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon and the self-proclaimed Iran–Syria axis of resistance. The survival of a secular Syria will be the first regional step towards the containment of this destructive sectarian clash.

Within this context it is noteworthy that Saudi Arabia, the godfather of the "Arab peace initiative", postures as a peace maker against the Israeli occupying power, but insists on military solution in Syria whose Golan Heights is occupied by Israel since 1967.

Ironically, Saudi – Israeli crossroads seem to meet as the only regional relief for the kingdom. This approach of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" is creating a fait accompli of a Saudi-Israeli marriage of convenience against Syria and Iran, which places the two countries on a higher moral ground among the overwhelming majority of Arabs and Muslims. - January 8, 2014.

* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.

The Saudi bull in the Arab china shop

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 05:26 AM PST

BY NICOLA NASSER
January 08, 2014

Obsessed with the "Iran threat" which lead to its warmongering in Syria, Saudi Arabia is acting like a bull in a china shop, wreaking regional havoc in an already Arab and fragile political environment, creating what George Joffe of Cambridge University's Centre of International Studies, last December 30, called the "second Arab cold war" – the first being the Saudi-led cold war with the Pan-Arab Egypt of Gamal Abdul Nasser since the 1960s.

The kingdom now stands almost politically isolated. Its "going it alone" attitude in the Syrian conflict has cornered Saudi Arabia in a self-inflicted foreign policy no-win deadlock, at odds with three super powers, including its strategic US ally as well as Russia and China, in addition to regional heavy weights Iran, Iraq, Egypt and Algeria, all of whom advocate a political settlement of the conflict.

Within the six-member Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (GCC), the kingdom navigates no better.

It is at loggerheads with Qatar over the latter's sponsorship of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) and consequently over the two countries' disagreement over the removal of MB-led Mohammad Morsi's presidency.

Saudi Arabia's hostility to the MB and its support of their removal from power in Egypt have reflected negatively on Saudi-Turkish relations as well, and have had repercussions in Syria, leading to a restructuring of the insurgent political and military competing leaders who claim the representation of the Syrian people: Qatari and Turkish-supported leading figures and organisations were replaced by Saudi loyalists and accordingly, for example, the "Free Syrian Army" has simply disappeared, replaced by the Islamic Front.

In the last GCC summit meeting in Kuwait, the other five members of the GCC, Oman in particular, rejected the kingdom's proposal to develop the "cooperation council" into a confederation.

Despite the Saudi bailing-out of the post-Morsi interim government in Cairo with a few billion US dollars, Egypt doesn't see eye to eye with Riyadh or with Syria, where it joined the political solution advocates, nor on relations with Russia, which Egypt is now reviving to balance its US ties.

According to Wall Street Journal online on January 5, the ensuing situation "is placing the White House in a growing diplomatic quandary as its regional allies fall into competing camps".

The fact that the United States has chosen diplomacy instead of military confrontation with Tehran and Damascus has politically isolated the kingdom, which had hedged its bets on a western military intervention led or blessed by the United States. It feels betrayed by its American strategic ally. For a long time it relied on a long-mistaken understanding that the US marines would be always available as mercenary soldiers ready to fight Saudi wars as long as the wealthy kingdom would pay for it, not aware of the US understanding of the vice versa.

However, instead of maneuvering wisely to backtrack to steer in harmony with the US, the kingdom stubbornly decided to "go it alone".

In an op-ed published by The New York Times on last December 19, Saudi Ambassador to the UK, Prince Nawaf bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, said his country "will go it alone" against Syria and Iran, because it "will not stand idly by" while the US compromises Saudi Arabia's security and "risk[s] the region's stability".

However, "in spite of its great wealth, the kingdom is not able to confront significant threats in its strategic environment on its own," former Iran Coordinator in Israel's National Security Council, Yoel Guzansky, wrote in Haaretz on last December 25, adding that as regards the Saudi "deterrence of and protection from Iran… no other major power is currently interested in or capable of filling the role played by the United States."

As of late this summer, Saudi Arabia had given $400 million in arms and other equipment to Syrian Salafi Jihadists, the Wall Street Journal online reported last December 29.

True, Saudi warmongering over Syria and Iran could abort the Geneva II conference on Syria, scheduled to convene on January 22 in Montreux, Switzerland to wrap up a political settlement, but at the end of the day, the Saudi kingdom is more likely to end up the only loser in the face of a regional and worldwide consensus on political settlement as the only possible exit out of the Syrian conflict.

Logic dictates that Iran should be in and Saudi Arabia out, but the Geneva II guest list includes warmongering Saudi Arabia while excluding Iran, which has been calling from the start for a political solution. Such an arrangement warns of including the only "spoiler-in-chief", in the words of the Assistant Professor of International Studies at Arcadia University, Pennsylvania, Samer N. Abboud, writing in the Qatari www.aljazeera.com on January 5.

US and Russian top diplomats, John Kerry and Sergey Lavrov were scheduled during a meeting ahead of Geneva II to decide on Iran's participation, according to Martin Nesirky, spokesperson for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

There is no way the kingdom could succeed in Syria where a US-led Qatari, Turkish, French and British alliance failed. Saudi former intelligence chief, former ambassador to the US and an influential member of the royal family, Prince Turki bin Faisal Al Saud, admitted their failure when he told CNBC on January 7 that the United States failed in its dealing with the Syrian conflict.

The three-year old conflict in Syria has been somewhat contained within its own borders, but Saudi Arabia's ongoing warmongering threatens to perpetuate the conflict and, more importantly, to spill it over regionally without achieving the Saudi proclaimed goal of changing the regime in Damascus at any cost.

The protracted Syrian conflict is already spilling over into neighbouring countries through the Saudi sectarian agitation and incitement.

In the east, Iraqi officials have already appealed to the Saudi and other GCC governments to stop their intervention in Iraq's internal affairs by arms and political, financial and logistical support to insurgents whose terrorism claimed the lives of some ten thousand overwhelmingly civilian Iraqis in 2013.

West of Syria, "Lebanon is paralyzed right now", General Michel Aoun, leader of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the second largest bloc in Lebanese parliament, told www.al-monitor.com on last December 13. After a two-week power vacuum, a prime minister-designate was nominated last April, but he has yet to form his government. His efforts have reached a dead end. The country has since been administrated by a caretaker government. No breakthrough seems imminent.

Saudi Arabia is the reason. It is exploiting its historical influence with loyalists and allies to prevent any inclusive government. It insists on the exclusion of Hizbullah as a precondition. The dead end polarised the country between pro-Syria and pro-Saudi camps. Riyadh, to guarantee a no-return by its loyalists, has recently fuelled this polarisation with a three billion "gift" over five years to arm the Lebanese army with French weapons in the hope of creating a counterbalance to Hezbullah, thus qualifying Lebanon for a civil war.

Meanwhile the northern and eastern parts of the country have slipped out of the control of the central government in Beirut and became a bastion of a Saudi-supported training camp, safe haven, manpower reservoir and a host of foreign Jihadists, fuelling the Syrian conflict with arms and fighters.

Deterred by the military successes of the official Syrian Arab Army against them and falling back on Lebanon, those "Jihadists" are retaliating with the escalation of suicide bombings inside Lebanon, which are claiming more and more Lebanese civilian lives of all sects.

In the south in Jordan, where the kingdom succeeded for three years to keep balance between its geopolitical links with Syria and its strategic alliance with the US and Saudi Arabia, warnings against a mounting Saudi pressure to change course have been voiced.

For example, former premier and member of the upper house, Ma'arouf al-Bakhit, quoted by www.ammonnews.net on last December 30, warned that the disparity between the US and Saudi approaches to solving the Syrian conflict is pressuring Jordan, which is now facing the "challenge" of the possibility that Saudi Arabia "might act to impose its vision on Jordan", indicating that "Syria no longer views Jordan as neutral" and accuses the kingdom of "hosting a Saudi – Israeli operations room to run military operations in Syria". If Syria decides to act on this accusation, al-Bakhit added, it is "possible" to "move part of war" to "the interior of the kingdom's territory". Al-Bakhit should have cited Lebanon and Iraq as live precedents.

Further away in Russia, the latest terror attacks in Volgograd were interpreted as an integral part of and attributed to the same terror network and mastermind in the Middle East, thus alienating the emerging Russian world polar. Russian media reports have implicated Saudi Arabia as responsible.

Since the so-called "Arab Spring" sprang out in Tunisia three years ago, the Saudi-led GCC monarchies succeeded in defending themselves against the tidal popular protests by a preempting financial bailout (Oman, Bahrain) or by direct military intervention (Bahrain) and by financial, political and indirect, but public nonetheless, military intervention to hijack the burgeoning revolutions in the "republics", which have become more like china shops, either stateless or failed states, breathlessly in a life or death fight against "Islamist" terror organisations, which are armed and financed by none other than this same Saudi-led petrodollar monarchies and sheikhdoms.

This Saudi-led strategy is best manifested in Syria, where it met its first failure. Internal, regional and international consensus on political settlement and anti-terror campaign is gaining momentum to put an end to this strategy. Saudi Arabia has no other option but either to backtrack or being isolated. It either changes course or changes its leadership.

Its warmongering in Syria is portraying the kingdom in public opinion as the regional mastermind of violence and instability, vindicating American accusations fuelled by Israeli incitement, in the aftermath of the terror attacks in US on September 11, 2001 that the Saudi sectarian ideology is an incubator nurturing violence and terror, despite the kingdom's long war against its own Islamist terrorists.

This sectarian ideology is creating a sectarian clash across the Middle East between two theocracies, the "Shiite" theocracy of Iran and the Sunni theocracy of Saudi Arabia, thus blurring the real dividing line of the regional battle between the US-protected Israeli occupation of Arab lands in Palestine, Syria and Lebanon and the self-proclaimed Iran–Syria axis of resistance. The survival of a secular Syria will be the first regional step towards the containment of this destructive sectarian clash.

Within this context it is noteworthy that Saudi Arabia, the godfather of the "Arab peace initiative", postures as a peace maker against the Israeli occupying power, but insists on military solution in Syria whose Golan Heights is occupied by Israel since 1967.

Ironically, Saudi – Israeli crossroads seem to meet as the only regional relief for the kingdom. This approach of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" is creating a fait accompli of a Saudi-Israeli marriage of convenience against Syria and Iran, which places the two countries on a higher moral ground among the overwhelming majority of Arabs and Muslims. - January 8, 2014.

* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Books

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Book review – No Country for Righteous Men

Posted: 07 Jan 2014 05:09 PM PST

BY EMMANUEL SURENDRA
January 08, 2014

First you need to get past the title: "No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness" – a mouthful, ugh. 

But obviously there are some allusions to the Coen Brothers' titular blockbuster, "No Country for Old Men".

Then you have to get past the book cover, and the gushing prose, or foreword. After that you find a thought-provoking book.

S. Thayaparan's body of work, 383 pages of socio-political commentary, is a compilation of posts written at Malaysiakini over a two-year period, sectioned into themes.

"A snapshot of the political landscape as I see it," he says, with the purpose of enabling right-thinking Malaysians to "start the hard journey of questioning those who claim to want to lead us".

Well, to a certain degree, Thayaparan does achieve what he sets out to do with the book. The definition of the "culture of offendedness" is a well-thought gambit, setting the tone for what is inside.

Thumb through the book and the usual topics on race and religion are offered, with comments criticising both the ruling coalition and the opposition – comments that earned him a following of sorts. 

Kudos to the author for highlighting that "in the end a dominant 'Malay' community will decide the destiny of this country."

S. Thayaparan has included interviews with some colourful figures of Malaysia's political scene. – January 8, 2014.S. Thayaparan has included interviews with some colourful figures of Malaysia's political scene. – January 8, 2014.Also thumbs up for conducting interviews with Malaysian politics' more colourful characters like Hindraf's P. Uthayakumar, Socialist Party of Malaysia's Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj, and rights activist Haris Ibrahim.

Speaking of Hindraf, Thayaparan's 75-page rhetoric, "The Indian Game", is also worth a read as it argues the relevance of Hindraf in winning the Indian vote.

The book, however, falls short on a few points. For starters, it is introduced at a time when many of Thayaparan's views are in need of an upgrade. After all, one can only revel in the past musings of a man to a certain degree.

Midway, there is also the notion that what Thayaparan's saying – his observations about Malaysian politics, Umno's grip on society, and the opposition's political narrative – is nothing new. 

Alternative media ushered in a certain awakening, so his views resonate with many Malaysians. And while he makes an effort to be different, Thayaparan still falls into the same old framework of political discourse, working out solutions using present systems, such as the evil of Umno, the failings of Pakatan and the PAS dilemma of finding the middle ground.

Malaysians need something fresh. 

Then there is the fact that some of his analyses gets a tad personal. His entire section on the Bersih rally oozes emotions, and reads like a travelogue. And why bother hitting out at a fellow commenter's work? Why dedicate space to an insignificant other, when you could actually put that effort to contributing an analytical piece as opposed to one that's rife with emotions? Baffling.

But the nagging issue about the book overall is its readability. Pockmarked within these pages are typos (for instance, in pages 178, 199 and 327). There is also the issue of copyediting where lengthy prose are not separated by the simple comma or period, making following Thayaparan's arguments challenging.

In the end, the core value of Thayaparan's "No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness" is not saying something new, but it is saying forcefully what has been said – that Malaysia needs a different political discourse if it truly wants to be a multicultural country.

But the work is certainly good reference; best for tenderfoots wanting some context into the dizzying political scene.

"No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness"  by S. Thayaparan is priced at RM40 and published by Strategic Information and Research Development Centre. – January 8, 2014.

Book review – No Country for Righteous Men

Posted: 07 Jan 2014 05:09 PM PST

BY EMMANUEL SURENDRA
January 08, 2014

First you need to get past the title: "No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness" – a mouthful, ugh. 

But obviously there are some allusions to the Coen Brothers' titular blockbuster, "No Country for Old Men".

Then you have to get past the book cover, and the gushing prose, or foreword. After that you find a thought-provoking book.

S. Thayaparan's body of work, 383 pages of socio-political commentary, is a compilation of posts written at Malaysiakini over a two-year period, sectioned into themes.

"A snapshot of the political landscape as I see it," he says, with the purpose of enabling right-thinking Malaysians to "start the hard journey of questioning those who claim to want to lead us".

Well, to a certain degree, Thayaparan does achieve what he sets out to do with the book. The definition of the "culture of offendedness" is a well-thought gambit, setting the tone for what is inside.

Thumb through the book and the usual topics on race and religion are offered, with comments criticising both the ruling coalition and the opposition – comments that earned him a following of sorts. 

Kudos to the author for highlighting that "in the end a dominant 'Malay' community will decide the destiny of this country."

S. Thayaparan has included interviews with some colourful figures of Malaysia's political scene. – January 8, 2014.S. Thayaparan has included interviews with some colourful figures of Malaysia's political scene. – January 8, 2014.Also thumbs up for conducting interviews with Malaysian politics' more colourful characters like Hindraf's P. Uthayakumar, Socialist Party of Malaysia's Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj, and rights activist Haris Ibrahim.

Speaking of Hindraf, Thayaparan's 75-page rhetoric, "The Indian Game", is also worth a read as it argues the relevance of Hindraf in winning the Indian vote.

The book, however, falls short on a few points. For starters, it is introduced at a time when many of Thayaparan's views are in need of an upgrade. After all, one can only revel in the past musings of a man to a certain degree.

Midway, there is also the notion that what Thayaparan's saying – his observations about Malaysian politics, Umno's grip on society, and the opposition's political narrative – is nothing new. 

Alternative media ushered in a certain awakening, so his views resonate with many Malaysians. And while he makes an effort to be different, Thayaparan still falls into the same old framework of political discourse, working out solutions using present systems, such as the evil of Umno, the failings of Pakatan and the PAS dilemma of finding the middle ground.

Malaysians need something fresh. 

Then there is the fact that some of his analyses gets a tad personal. His entire section on the Bersih rally oozes emotions, and reads like a travelogue. And why bother hitting out at a fellow commenter's work? Why dedicate space to an insignificant other, when you could actually put that effort to contributing an analytical piece as opposed to one that's rife with emotions? Baffling.

But the nagging issue about the book overall is its readability. Pockmarked within these pages are typos (for instance, in pages 178, 199 and 327). There is also the issue of copyediting where lengthy prose are not separated by the simple comma or period, making following Thayaparan's arguments challenging.

In the end, the core value of Thayaparan's "No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness" is not saying something new, but it is saying forcefully what has been said – that Malaysia needs a different political discourse if it truly wants to be a multicultural country.

But the work is certainly good reference; best for tenderfoots wanting some context into the dizzying political scene.

"No Country for Righteous Men and Other Essays in a Culture of Offendedness"  by S. Thayaparan is priced at RM40 and published by Strategic Information and Research Development Centre. – January 8, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Bicara saman fitnah Nurul Izzah terhadap Utusan pada 14 April

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 03:12 AM PST

January 08, 2014

Mahkamah Tinggi hari ini menetapkan 14 April bagi perbicaraan kes saman fitnah Anggota Parlimen Lembah Pantai Nurul Izzah Anwar (gambar) terhadap Ketua Pengarang Utusan Malaysia Datuk Aziz Ishak dan Utusan Melayu (Malaysia) Berhad.

Hakim Datuk Hue Siew Kheng menetapkan tarikh itu di dalam kamar dengan dihadiri peguam Azhana Mohd Khairudin yang mewakili Nurul Izzah dan peguam Raihanah Ariffin bagi pihak Utusan.

Azhana ketika ditemui pemberita memberitahu mahkamah menetapkan 14, 15 dan 18 April untuk perbicaraan kes itu.

Beliau berkata kes itu sepatutnya dibicarakan selama tiga hari bermula 22 Januari ini namun ditangguhkan kerana peguam Datuk Mohd Hafarizam Harun yang mewakili Utusan terlibat dalam petisyen pilihan raya pada tarikh berkenaan.

Pada 23 November 2012, Nurul Izzah memfailkan saman itu kerana mendakwa Aziz dan Utusan memutarbelitkan kenyataannya dalam forum mengenai kebebasan beragama untuk orang Melayu.

Menerusi pernyataan tuntutannya, Nurul Izzah yang juga Naib Presiden Parti Keadilan Rakyat mendakwa empat artikel yang mengandungi perkataan fitnah terhadapnya diterbitkan akhbar berkenaan pada 6 dan 7 November 2012.

Beliau memohon perintah supaya kedua-dua defendan memohon maaf dan menarik balik tuduhan fitnah ke atasnya dalam masa 24 jam daripada tarikh perintah itu, selain menuntut ganti rugi am, ganti rugi teladan dan ganti rugi melampau dan kos difikirkan sesuai oleh mahkamah. - Bernama, 8 Januari, 2014.

Harga barang naik bukan kerana kos bahan api tetapi peranan orang tengah, kata Musa

Posted: 08 Jan 2014 03:08 AM PST

January 08, 2014

Ketua Menteri Sabah Datuk Seri Musa Aman (gambar) berkata kenaikan harga barang di negeri itu bukan berpunca daripada kenaikan harga bahan api tetapi sebaliknya peranan orang tengah yang cuba mengaut keuntungan.

Beliau berkata kerajaan negeri telah menubuhkan sebuah jawatankuasa khas bagi memantau kenaikan harga barang termasuk tindakan orang tengah memanipulasi harga barangan di pasaran.

Jawatankuasa khas itu dipengerusikan oleh Menteri Pembangunan Masyarakat dan Hal Ehwal Pengguna Sabahm Datuk Jainab Ahmad Ayid.

"Kita menerima beberapa aduan mengenai kenaikan harga barangan di Sabah dan kita harus mengambil tindakan dan memantau perkara ini secara konsisten," katanya kepada pemberita selepas mempengerusikan mesyuarat pasca Kabinet pertama bagi tahun ini di Wisma Innoprise, di Kota Kinabalu hari ini.

Musa berkata jawatankuasa khas itu akan memantau kenaikan semua jenis barangan tanpa mengklasifikasikan barangan tertentu terutama barang kawalan.

Dalam perkembangan lain, Musa berkata sambutan Maulidur Rasul peringkat negeri buat julung kali akan diadakan di Tawau pada Isnin dan Selasa ini.

Beliau berkata majlis tahlil dan bacaan Yassin akan diadakan pada Isnin dan perarakan sambutan di Padang Perbandaran Tawau pada keesokkannya. - Bernama, 8 Januari, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


In ‘Allah’ issue, the politicians have failed the people

Posted: 07 Jan 2014 02:58 PM PST

January 08, 2014

Ask Lord Bobo is a weekly column by LoyarBurok where all your profound, abstruse, erudite, hermetic, recondite, sagacious, and other thesaurus-described queries are answered. Free Your Mind!

"Lord Bobo, I was having a conversation with a friend recently, and he said all politicians are the same – whether BN or Pakatan, they're all selfish b******* with only self-preservation as their primary aim. He says there's no point voting at all. Recent goings-on in Selangor following the Jais bible raid have reinforced his view. What do you think?" (Disillusioned, via email)

It's the same story isn't it? You were swept off your feet by the beautiful promises of the politician; he was charming and you were naïve. His whispered sweet-nothings convinced you to commit yourself to him – here, finally, is the man (and political party) who will save us all! It of course helped that his competition was not-at-all attractive. You trusted him with all your heart, and gave yourself completely.

But the smooth-talking b****** broke his promises. You were too in love, too emotionally dependent to turn back, so you persevered. "Everyone makes mistakes," you told yourself. "No politician is perfect," you reassured yourself. "The other party is much, much worse," you told your friends. The politician then made more promises, promised that he was trying his best, that hey, change takes time, he had to fight the system and clean up the mess left behind by the previous administration. So you recommitted to him – how foolish of you to doubt his virtuous commitment to justice and the common good! – you allowed yourself to dream again that this man, this political party, were angels sent from above.

Lord Bobo would sympathise with you fools who place politicians on a pedestal, and lay all your hopes at their feet. But we cannot. We simply cannot sympathise with you because we have told you many times before that politicians should not be trusted. They are not saviours from above, they are servants of the people. Sure, there may be some individuals you can name who truly are "good people" – but these individuals will never rise to the top, and will never truly have any power within their parties. These self-proclaimed "reformers" are, in effect, nobodies. They are just puppets propped up to appease naïve voters into thinking that the entire party are as forward-thinking. Once in a while a puppet is propped up really high, perhaps one can even smooth-talk and smile his way into being given a Ministerial portfolio, but it is all a show.

Yes, my dear minion, it's time to grow up. Politics is a boulevard of broken promises. The heartbreak is inevitable. It's in their nature to first protect themselves (after all, what good is a politician who doesn't win elections, beginning with his own internal party elections?).

In Selangor, when it comes to the use of "Allah" and the recent bible-confiscation by Jais, the Selangor State Government has failed miserably in protecting the legitimate interests of the minority. To ask the public to abide by the decree of the Selangor Sultan is to condone the unconstitutional restriction of religious practice of the minority. The Selangor Sultan, at the end of the day, is a constitutional monarch, nothing more. The Selangor Sultan may be the head of Islam in Selangor, but he does not have the power to control the religious practices of persons not professing the religion of Islam. End of story. It is as simple as that.

The Sultan's role as the Head of Islam is circumscribed by the Federal Constitution, the State Constitution of Selangor, and various federal and state laws. The titah ("decree") of the Selangor Sultan prohibiting the use of the word "Allah" has no force of law. Zero; nada; zilch. Otherwise, it would be antithetical to democracy. A constitutional monarch was not elected by the people, and does not and should not have the power or mandate to decide or pass laws that would affect the public. Thus, not following the titah of a constitutional monarch cannot by any stretch of the imagination be considered treasonous.

On the other hand, the state government was elected by the people and has the duty to protect the rights of all people that have put it in power. Unfortunately, the state government made like a tortoise, and withdrew into its shell. Voters in Selangor have every right to be upset with the State Government for their cowardice and complete lack of principles. The Selangor State Government, including the Menteri Besar, are so busy thinking about self-preservation to even consider what is best, what is right. These elected representatives end up representing no one but themselves, cowering in fear of the Sultan and the religious extremists. It's ironic isn't it? Those who do not have the mandate of the electorate, like Jais, act with impunity. And those who do, choose to turn the other cheek, and hide under the sheets hoping the problem will disappear.

It would be bad enough if Pakatan Rakyat hid cowering in their tortoise-shells, but what's even worse is that when three members of the Selangor state assembly – Yeo Bee Yin, Rajiv Rishyakaran, and Lau Weng San – issued a statement promising to propose to amend the Selangor Non-Islamic Religions (Control of Propagation Among Muslims) Enactment 1988 which was wielded by Jais, they were publicly criticised by some, including Anwar Ibrahim and some PAS leaders.

Sure, what the trio did was not perfect – perhaps getting one Muslim co-signatory would have been a good thing, to avoid further solidifying the line of this being a Muslims vs non-Muslims battle. But even so, at least it was doing something, which is more than can be said about the other so-called leaders of Pakatan Rakyat. If you are too cowardly to do what is right, at least have the good grace to not interfere with those who are trying to do something.

Of course we also shouldn't forget our dear federal government. After all, what is a Prime Minister if not the leader of the country. What was it that Najib said about the whole hullabaloo? Oh… not much. Khalid Ibrahim may be hiding in his shell, but Najib really is the master of getting out of the kitchen as soon as it gets a little warm. There were times in recent weeks when Malaysians didn't even know whether the Prime Minister was in the country or not. In fact, Najib has been so adept at camouflaging that some Malaysians have even forgotten they had a Prime Minister.

Lord Bobo is obviously aware that the whole "Allah" issue is part of a major power play by these power-hungry tyrants who happen to be your leaders. After all, it's not as if Christians have suddenly started using "Allah" in the past few years – in fact "Allah" has been used in bibles, worship songs and church sermons for decades now, even before Malaysia was formed. Yes, we know that some from the other side have said Christians cannot rely on colonial texts written by white men out to convert the poor brown natives, but why then are Christians in Sabah, Sarawak, and the whole of the Middle East allowed to use the word?

Umno, the monarchs, and Pakatan Rakyat will be part of this wrestling match (calling it a chess match would give it an intellectual gloss it certainly does not deserve) for some time yet, and there is no indication who will be ultimately victorious. Lord Bobo has asked some "Tralfamadorians", and even they do not know. We have previously shared what we think the correct solution is, but none of your leaders are intelligent enough to listen to a super-intelligent wonder-typewriting monkey.

All politicians and political parties are the same. There are some exceptions, but these individuals are not powerful enough within their own party to effect any real, big-scale, change. His Supreme Eminenceness has said this many, many times – stop putting politicians on a pedestal. Don't lay your hopes at their doors. Decentralise this illogical concentration of power in the hands of a few, and ensure that politicians are always answerable to the voters. As for voting, well, that's an individual choice really. Lord Bobo had a pint with Russell Brand at the beginning of last year and mind-controlled him to share some of our old views in a new package, and he's been doing quite well. Look it up on YouTube.

At the heart of this of course is the "Allah" issue. The "Allah" issue is very, very complex (we attempted to summarise it in a previous column). It is made very, very complex because of the political power play involved, and the inevitable media-fuelled fear-mongering that has resulted from it. It is not really the media's fault (for a change), as they have to report what all these morons are saying. Unfortunately in this case, we cannot say that what the politicians are saying is inconsistent with what the public thinks, as there is a lot of rubbish circulating on social media too (follow us at @LoyarBurok! – er, not for rubbish though).

There are some who are saying that the solution is simple, and that everyone should "just compromise" – details of course are never supplied, as how can this issue be settled by compromise? Either Christians can use "Allah" or they cannot. But the true gems are those who say that since "Allah" isn't essential to the Christian faith (which obviously these smart ones have the authority to so declare), Christians should just use another word.

Why should this be the solution, that Christians stop using the word? Because the Muslims will be upset, confused, and angry if they don't? As we said, it is very, very complex. Of course, no one is asking why Muslims suddenly got confused (or have been convinced that there is a risk of being confused), because that might mean the blame falling on the politicians. You Malaysians are all pawns in this political game, and many of you don't even know it.  Lord Bobo shudders to think what else is in store for you. – January 8, 2014.

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

In ‘Allah’ issue, the politicians have failed the people

Posted: 07 Jan 2014 02:58 PM PST

January 08, 2014

Ask Lord Bobo is a weekly column by LoyarBurok where all your profound, abstruse, erudite, hermetic, recondite, sagacious, and other thesaurus-described queries are answered. Free Your Mind!

"Lord Bobo, I was having a conversation with a friend recently, and he said all politicians are the same – whether BN or Pakatan, they're all selfish b******* with only self-preservation as their primary aim. He says there's no point voting at all. Recent goings-on in Selangor following the Jais bible raid have reinforced his view. What do you think?" (Disillusioned, via email)

It's the same story isn't it? You were swept off your feet by the beautiful promises of the politician; he was charming and you were naïve. His whispered sweet-nothings convinced you to commit yourself to him – here, finally, is the man (and political party) who will save us all! It of course helped that his competition was not-at-all attractive. You trusted him with all your heart, and gave yourself completely.

But the smooth-talking b****** broke his promises. You were too in love, too emotionally dependent to turn back, so you persevered. "Everyone makes mistakes," you told yourself. "No politician is perfect," you reassured yourself. "The other party is much, much worse," you told your friends. The politician then made more promises, promised that he was trying his best, that hey, change takes time, he had to fight the system and clean up the mess left behind by the previous administration. So you recommitted to him – how foolish of you to doubt his virtuous commitment to justice and the common good! – you allowed yourself to dream again that this man, this political party, were angels sent from above.

Lord Bobo would sympathise with you fools who place politicians on a pedestal, and lay all your hopes at their feet. But we cannot. We simply cannot sympathise with you because we have told you many times before that politicians should not be trusted. They are not saviours from above, they are servants of the people. Sure, there may be some individuals you can name who truly are "good people" – but these individuals will never rise to the top, and will never truly have any power within their parties. These self-proclaimed "reformers" are, in effect, nobodies. They are just puppets propped up to appease naïve voters into thinking that the entire party are as forward-thinking. Once in a while a puppet is propped up really high, perhaps one can even smooth-talk and smile his way into being given a Ministerial portfolio, but it is all a show.

Yes, my dear minion, it's time to grow up. Politics is a boulevard of broken promises. The heartbreak is inevitable. It's in their nature to first protect themselves (after all, what good is a politician who doesn't win elections, beginning with his own internal party elections?).

In Selangor, when it comes to the use of "Allah" and the recent bible-confiscation by Jais, the Selangor State Government has failed miserably in protecting the legitimate interests of the minority. To ask the public to abide by the decree of the Selangor Sultan is to condone the unconstitutional restriction of religious practice of the minority. The Selangor Sultan, at the end of the day, is a constitutional monarch, nothing more. The Selangor Sultan may be the head of Islam in Selangor, but he does not have the power to control the religious practices of persons not professing the religion of Islam. End of story. It is as simple as that.

The Sultan's role as the Head of Islam is circumscribed by the Federal Constitution, the State Constitution of Selangor, and various federal and state laws. The titah ("decree") of the Selangor Sultan prohibiting the use of the word "Allah" has no force of law. Zero; nada; zilch. Otherwise, it would be antithetical to democracy. A constitutional monarch was not elected by the people, and does not and should not have the power or mandate to decide or pass laws that would affect the public. Thus, not following the titah of a constitutional monarch cannot by any stretch of the imagination be considered treasonous.

On the other hand, the state government was elected by the people and has the duty to protect the rights of all people that have put it in power. Unfortunately, the state government made like a tortoise, and withdrew into its shell. Voters in Selangor have every right to be upset with the State Government for their cowardice and complete lack of principles. The Selangor State Government, including the Menteri Besar, are so busy thinking about self-preservation to even consider what is best, what is right. These elected representatives end up representing no one but themselves, cowering in fear of the Sultan and the religious extremists. It's ironic isn't it? Those who do not have the mandate of the electorate, like Jais, act with impunity. And those who do, choose to turn the other cheek, and hide under the sheets hoping the problem will disappear.

It would be bad enough if Pakatan Rakyat hid cowering in their tortoise-shells, but what's even worse is that when three members of the Selangor state assembly – Yeo Bee Yin, Rajiv Rishyakaran, and Lau Weng San – issued a statement promising to propose to amend the Selangor Non-Islamic Religions (Control of Propagation Among Muslims) Enactment 1988 which was wielded by Jais, they were publicly criticised by some, including Anwar Ibrahim and some PAS leaders.

Sure, what the trio did was not perfect – perhaps getting one Muslim co-signatory would have been a good thing, to avoid further solidifying the line of this being a Muslims vs non-Muslims battle. But even so, at least it was doing something, which is more than can be said about the other so-called leaders of Pakatan Rakyat. If you are too cowardly to do what is right, at least have the good grace to not interfere with those who are trying to do something.

Of course we also shouldn't forget our dear federal government. After all, what is a Prime Minister if not the leader of the country. What was it that Najib said about the whole hullabaloo? Oh… not much. Khalid Ibrahim may be hiding in his shell, but Najib really is the master of getting out of the kitchen as soon as it gets a little warm. There were times in recent weeks when Malaysians didn't even know whether the Prime Minister was in the country or not. In fact, Najib has been so adept at camouflaging that some Malaysians have even forgotten they had a Prime Minister.

Lord Bobo is obviously aware that the whole "Allah" issue is part of a major power play by these power-hungry tyrants who happen to be your leaders. After all, it's not as if Christians have suddenly started using "Allah" in the past few years – in fact "Allah" has been used in bibles, worship songs and church sermons for decades now, even before Malaysia was formed. Yes, we know that some from the other side have said Christians cannot rely on colonial texts written by white men out to convert the poor brown natives, but why then are Christians in Sabah, Sarawak, and the whole of the Middle East allowed to use the word?

Umno, the monarchs, and Pakatan Rakyat will be part of this wrestling match (calling it a chess match would give it an intellectual gloss it certainly does not deserve) for some time yet, and there is no indication who will be ultimately victorious. Lord Bobo has asked some "Tralfamadorians", and even they do not know. We have previously shared what we think the correct solution is, but none of your leaders are intelligent enough to listen to a super-intelligent wonder-typewriting monkey.

All politicians and political parties are the same. There are some exceptions, but these individuals are not powerful enough within their own party to effect any real, big-scale, change. His Supreme Eminenceness has said this many, many times – stop putting politicians on a pedestal. Don't lay your hopes at their doors. Decentralise this illogical concentration of power in the hands of a few, and ensure that politicians are always answerable to the voters. As for voting, well, that's an individual choice really. Lord Bobo had a pint with Russell Brand at the beginning of last year and mind-controlled him to share some of our old views in a new package, and he's been doing quite well. Look it up on YouTube.

At the heart of this of course is the "Allah" issue. The "Allah" issue is very, very complex (we attempted to summarise it in a previous column). It is made very, very complex because of the political power play involved, and the inevitable media-fuelled fear-mongering that has resulted from it. It is not really the media's fault (for a change), as they have to report what all these morons are saying. Unfortunately in this case, we cannot say that what the politicians are saying is inconsistent with what the public thinks, as there is a lot of rubbish circulating on social media too (follow us at @LoyarBurok! – er, not for rubbish though).

There are some who are saying that the solution is simple, and that everyone should "just compromise" – details of course are never supplied, as how can this issue be settled by compromise? Either Christians can use "Allah" or they cannot. But the true gems are those who say that since "Allah" isn't essential to the Christian faith (which obviously these smart ones have the authority to so declare), Christians should just use another word.

Why should this be the solution, that Christians stop using the word? Because the Muslims will be upset, confused, and angry if they don't? As we said, it is very, very complex. Of course, no one is asking why Muslims suddenly got confused (or have been convinced that there is a risk of being confused), because that might mean the blame falling on the politicians. You Malaysians are all pawns in this political game, and many of you don't even know it.  Lord Bobo shudders to think what else is in store for you. – January 8, 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
 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved