Jumaat, 2 Mei 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


French and fine at Croisette

Posted: 02 May 2014 05:55 PM PDT

BY EU HOOI KHAW
May 03, 2014

Baked Mussels with Herb Butter, escargot style.Baked Mussels with Herb Butter, escargot style.It was telling that the amuse bouche at Croisette in Bangsar was pork pate and there was the inclusion of Filet Mignon Pork with Whole Grain Mustard in the menu at this French cafe.

Bavarois Prawn Bisque with Avocado Cream and Cream Grelette.Bavarois Prawn Bisque with Avocado Cream and Cream Grelette.Chef/owner Pierre Chaillou has decided to have some pork items on his menu, while still maintaining a list of dishes that include seafood, duck, lamb and beef.

Served on a slice of toasted baguette, the pork pate tasted rustic, full-bodied and satisfying. I thought of buying a chunk of this to take home.

We were doing a tasting of the new menu at Croissette, beginning with Baked Mussels with Herb Butter, escargot style. They turned out to be juicy and drenched in melted butter with lots of chopped garlic and parsley.

The Bavarois Prawn Bisque with Avocado Cream and Cream Grelette had a very light prawn mousse topped with prawns and sitting on a crushed cracker base.

This chilled bavarois was so delicate, yet full of flavour which extended to the avocado cream, which matched it well.

Lamb Loin Pan Seared, Garlic Cream and Gratin Potato.Lamb Loin Pan Seared, Garlic Cream and Gratin Potato.Pierre does a good duck confit, but we were not having it as a main course. It appeared, shredded, in the Salad Landaise, together with smoked duck and gizzards, tossed in vinaigrette and scattered with croutons.

It was a worthy salad, and almost a meal in itself if you ate it on your own.

I loved the Grosse Raviole Cepe Mushrooms and Foie Gras, Truffle Oil Cloud. The ravioli was super thin and smooth, tumbling out its filling of delicious cepe mushrooms and foie gras at the bite. It sat in a mushroom soup touched with truffle oil and drizzled with crème fraiche.

The last of the five appetisers we tried was Scallops Panfried, with Leek Fondue and Prawn Raviole. The scallops were perfectly done, with caramelised edges and a light bounce. The sweet leek fondue complemented the scallops, and the fine prawn ravioli.

Filet Mignon Pork, Whole Grain Mustard.Filet Mignon Pork, Whole Grain Mustard.Of the main courses, I was totally into the Pan Seared Lamb Loin with Garlic Cream and Gratin Potatoes.

The meat was pink and tender, and the garlic cream was all that was needed to enhance the lamb. The cluster of baked garlic would have been better if I could just squeeze each one out of the skin. But the garlic was not soft and creamy enough.

The Fillet Mignon Pork with Grain Mustard had the right doneness and texture, and needed little embellishment besides the mustard sauce. It was served with linguine.

The Beef Ribeye Flambeed with Brandy, Black Pepper Sauce and Gratin Potato stood out for the red and green (besides black) peppercorns in the robust and aromatic sauce. It was just what the steak needed.

Beef Ribeye Flambeed with Brandy, Black Pepper Sauce and Gratin Potato.Beef Ribeye Flambeed with Brandy, Black Pepper Sauce and Gratin Potato.For a fish course, the Salmon Fillet with Braised Green Lentils du Puy and Merlot Reduction is an excellent choice.

The salmon had a crispy skin and flaked off easily; the lentils were so delicious in the merlot sauce. It's a substantial portion and might just fill you up.

Desserts are always worth saving room for at Croisette. The Ice Souffle Orange and Contreau wowed us. It was creamy and light with a lovely citrusy and heady lift.

The Chocolate Parfait, Orange Rind Confit Inclusion and Sauce Bergamot was exquisite.

Apple Tart on Thin Crust, Bavarois Pear & Chocolate, Ginger Flavoured Cream.Apple Tart on Thin Crust, Bavarois Pear & Chocolate, Ginger Flavoured Cream.The Apple Tart on Thin Crust finished before I could get to it, but I'm not going to share this next time. It's baked a la minute and needs a 15-minute wait.

Apple Tart Tartine is one of my favourite desserts.

The sublime Gateau Fraisier, Patisserie Pistachio made up for this. This had a divine pistachio cream and strawberries sandwiched between two thin layers of sponge cake.

(From left) Bavarois Pear & Chocolate, Ginger-flavoured Cream, Ice Souffle Orange & Contreau, Gateau Fraisier, Patisserie Pistachio.(From left) Bavarois Pear & Chocolate, Ginger-flavoured Cream, Ice Souffle Orange & Contreau, Gateau Fraisier, Patisserie Pistachio.The Bavarois Pear & Chocolate with Ginger-Flavoured English Cream was like a moist and rich chocolate cake.

You could pick any one of these five appetisers, main courses and desserts for a three-course dinner, and it would be just RM84 nett. Add two glasses of wine or two glasses of beer, and it would be RM118 nett.

Of course there is an a la carte menu to choose your lunch and dinner from.

The desserts are from RM12 to RM14 each, lamb loin is RM55, beef ribeye RM45, and Landaise Salad RM18.

Croisette is located at Level 3, Cascadium Condominium, 28 Jalan Penaga, Bukit Bandaraya, Kuala Lumpur, tel 016-330 4477, 014-665 7944.

It's open from Tuesday to Sunday, 11.45am to 2.30pm and 6.45pm to 10pm.

Croisette will be opening soon in Tanjung Bungah, Penang. – May 3, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Saha calls for racism crackdown

Posted: 02 May 2014 08:47 AM PDT

May 02, 2014

Former France striker Louis Saha has called for football clubs to be punished with multi-million pounds fines if their fans are found guilty of racist abuse.

The issue of racism in football was highlighted once again last weekend when a fan threw a banana at Brazil's Dani Alves (pic) during Barcelona's win at Villarreal.

Alves' response – he peeled the banana and then took a bite – sparked a widespread show of support for the player on social media, with fellow professionals and celebrities posting pictures of themselves with bananas.

Saha, who himself suffered racial abuse while playing in England and while with Italian giants Lazio, said the banana picture campaign had missed the point.

The one-time Manchester United favourite said football ought to follow the example of the National Basketball Association in the United States, which banned and fined Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling US$2.5 million (RM8.5 million) for making a racist remark in a taped interview.

"Football needs to start handing out those kind of fines," Saha, speaking at the launch of the Soccerex global convention in Manchester, said today.

"And believe me, people would change their behaviour if that happened. Right now (the authorities) are scared," the 35-year-old added.

"If (big fines) can be handed out to clubs whose fans are racially abusive then let's do it.

"That would be a big message to the world that this is not acceptable."

Saha, whose parents are from the French island of Guadeloupe, said he feared the reaction to the banana campaign masked a serious point.

"I am happy for this reaction, but I dislike the fact that we laugh about it. It's not funny at all.

"It looks like everyone is saying, 'we can't change anything, so let's laugh about it'."

Saha was racially abused twice during his four-year spell at Everton - firstly from the stands in 2011 and a year later on Twitter.

Nevertheless, he believes conditions for non-white players in England have improved significantly although problems remain in mainland Europe.

"Things have been done here but not in Europe," he said. "I know that because I played for Lazio for six months.

"Obviously the (Italian football) association is trying to do things and try to say that things are improving. England has been a great example (to follow)."

Former Liverpool and England winger John Barnes, who was born in Jamaica, experienced several virulent examples of racism when the problem was arguably at its height in the English game in the 1980s.

In one notorious incident in 1988, Barnes was pictured back-heeling a a banana off the pitch which had been thrown at him by an Everton fan during the Merseyside derby.

Barnes, speaking on behalf of England sponsor Vauxhall, said racist incidents could not be separated from the society that spawned such conduct.

"Donald Sterling or the man who threw the banana – I don't blame them at all," Barnes said.

"I blame the environment they were brought up in. That has made them feel that way.

"The symptoms need targeting and not the individuals.

"We have been wrongly taught for the last 200 years that there are certain groups of people who are morally and intellectually superior.

"How can we blame Sterling for being the way he is? This is what he has been told all his life." – AFP, May 2, 2014.

Martino seeks positives from difficult season for Barcelona

Posted: 02 May 2014 06:45 AM PDT

May 02, 2014

Barcelona coach Gerardo Martino (pic) has enjoyed his first season in charge at the club despite a disappointing season for the Spanish champions, he said today.

The Catalan side have stuttered into the closing stages of the campaign and only have a remote chance of winning the La Liga as they trail leaders Atletico Madrid by four points with three games left.

They were knocked out of the Champions League in the quarter-finals by Atletico and defeat in the King's Cup final by bitter rivals Real Madrid means Barca have fallen well short of expectations.

"It has been a year that of learning for me, of a team of this level, the league and of European football," Martino told a new conference ahead of the weekend match at home to Getafe.

"How to manage with difficult situations, live with the criticisms and the praises as well as many other experiences. I think you learn everywhere but especially here you learn a lot and quickly.

"It has been a season with a lot of intensity but I wouldn't say problematic. The club receives a lot of attention and the first year was always going to be difficult.

"The analysis changes with the results. It is a year where there has been a lot to learn and incorporate in my career. I hope to take it all on board."

The Argentine signed a two-year deal ahead of this campaign but it includes a clause which allows either party to cancel the agreement after the first year.

He looks unlikely to stay and former Barcelona favourite Luis Enrique, currently coach of Celta Vigo, leads the list of candidates to replace him.

"The chances until recently against Granada have been high (to win the league) and we had a lot of hope. We now continue with the same desire that we have shown against Athletic (Bilbao) and Villarreal," said Martino.

"We hope to continue as far as we can and do what is in our hands. It is still mathematically possible even though the likelihood is not very high.

"The players have the drive which was important in their period of glory that they have had. Even when things are not going well they continue to battle."

Martino also had words of sympathy for Bayern Munich coach Pep Guardiola who has been criticised for his style of football following the German side's Champions League mauling by Real Madrid.

"The comments that he and I receive cannot be compared as what he has achieved is the best in the history of football, not just Barcelona," he said.

"He defined a new era. To praise Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid it is not necessary to discredit another style or another way of thinking.

"On top of this, the Spain national side also plays this way. If you discredit the short passing game of Guardiola then you are also saying that the national team is going to lose as well." – Reuters, May 2, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Foreign workers in Canada fear backlash, loss of dreams

Posted: 01 May 2014 05:14 PM PDT

May 02, 2014

A Canadian flag waves beside McDonalds fast food restaurant in Toronto, yesterdat. About 400,000 people came to Canada under the government's temporary foreign worker program, which is designed to fill jobs for which there are no qualified Canadian candidates.The program has been hugely popular with employers, ballooning from 100,000 workers in 2002. But the backlash against it has also grown as the program, initially designed to help the booming resource industry, has expanded to lower-skilled jobs, especially at restaurant chains such as McDonald's Corp and Tim Hortons Inc.– Reuters pic, May 2, 2014.A Canadian flag waves beside McDonalds fast food restaurant in Toronto, yesterdat. About 400,000 people came to Canada under the government's temporary foreign worker program, which is designed to fill jobs for which there are no qualified Canadian candidates.The program has been hugely popular with employers, ballooning from 100,000 workers in 2002. But the backlash against it has also grown as the program, initially designed to help the booming resource industry, has expanded to lower-skilled jobs, especially at restaurant chains such as McDonald's Corp and Tim Hortons Inc.– Reuters pic, May 2, 2014.Bugan Wigan could handle the hard work packing fruit and cleaning hotel rooms, and the crushing debt she owed recruiters who found her jobs. But a backlash against the foreign-worker program that brought her to Canada means the clock is ticking on her ability to support her family in the Philippines.

"I'm here six years, away from my family. I was hoping I could bring them here. But now, we are just counting our days," said Wigan, 40, who currently works at McDonald's in Vancouver.

She is one of about 400,000 people who came to Canada under the government's temporary foreign worker program, which is designed to fill jobs for which there are no qualified Canadian candidates. The program has been hugely popular with employers, ballooning from 100,000 workers in 2002.

But the backlash against it has also grown as the program, initially designed to help the booming resource industry, has expanded to lower-skilled jobs, especially at restaurant chains such as McDonald's Corp and Tim Hortons Inc

Last week, the Conservative government slapped a moratorium on the food service industry hiring temporary foreign workers after media reports said that some restaurants had turned away qualified Canadians in favor of using foreigners to fill job openings.

Employment Minister Jason Kenney has acknowledged some abuses of the system and last year began tightening up the rules for employers to participate in the program. He has promised more changes.

Caught in the middle are workers like Wigan, who harboured dreams of using the program as a springboard to permanent residency. While the program is explicitly designed to be temporary, some workers have been able to use provisions that allow for longer stays. Those loopholes appear to be closing as the government moves to contain the backlash against the hiring of temporary foreign workers.

Anna, a Croatian woman who did not want to use her real name for fear the government will track her down, was devastated by Ottawa's decision last week to impose a moratorium on restaurant hiring of foreign temporary workers.

Armed with a university degree in agriculture and strong English, she found work at a cafe just 10 days after arriving in Toronto in 2012, and has worked there ever since. She now expects to be out of a job when her permit expires in December.

"For me, it is just the worst. I came here legally, did my part, paid my taxes, and now they don't allow me to keep going," said Anna, 29, blonde hair tucked up under a black fedora, as she took a break from serving coffee and sandwiches at the busy cafe in Toronto's fashion district.

"In Croatia, Canada is viewed as an amazing, welcoming country, but when you come here, you encounter problems like this," she said, tearing up when she talks about the mother she left behind in exchange for a steady job that pays US$10.93 (RM35.66)an hour and offers a dream of a better life.

Her boss is also upset. Like many business owners, he sees the program providing him with a hard-working, reliable workforce less prone to quitting when something better comes along. Workers who, as one industry group said, are willing to work the late shift.

"Where are (Canadians) when we put an ad in the paper? Why don't they want to come early in the morning? They are not there," said Ali, owner of three Torontocafes that use temporary foreign workers. He did not want to be named for fear of a backlash against his businesses.

As far as paying a higher wage to keep staff, Ali said it's a nice idea "as long as I can sell my sandwiches for C$42. I would love to pay them the highest possible."

With a national unemployment rate of 6.9% and joblessness as low as 4.5% and 4.9% in the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta, many employers complain of a shortage of skilled or willing workers, especially in the mining and energy industries.

But youth unemployment is 13.6%, and critics of the program believe the use of foreign workers in low-skilled jobs boosts unemployment and suppresses wages. They say it gives employers access to a cheaper, more desperate worker, ripe for abuse and without a path to permanent residency or citizenship.

"The whole program is set up to create a class of people who have fewer rights. The program is innately exploitative," said Yessy Byl, a human rights worker at theAlberta Civil Liberties Research Centre.

Byl, who has worked as an advocate for foreign workers for years, has heard of many kinds of abuse at the hands of Canadian employers who prefer the reliability of foreign workers to the whims of highly mobile Canadian workers in a strong economy.

"I don't know which story is the worst," Byl said, noting one example of Filipino hotel workers fired when they tried to move out of the house their employer wanted them to live in with 16 others, and another of a Mexican laborer gruesomely injured in his first, untrained, encountered with a chainsaw.

Many unions are also scathing in their criticism of employers who use foreign workers to avoid paying wages that Canadians would accept.

"Why can't they pay some more money to Canadian staff if that is their problem?" asked Joseph Maloney, vice-president at the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers. "But they pay minimum wages, starvation wages, so that gives them an excuse to bring in temporary foreign workers who don't know better ... and it's just wrong."

Immigration lawyer Vanessa Routley, who works mostly with employers looking for petroleum workers, doesn't buy the argument that Canadians are being cheated out of jobs.

"I really don't think it has any basis in reality. We are not raised to aspire to clean hotel rooms," she said.

Routley's fear now is for those foreigners who are already in Canada, working legally but facing the expiration of their permits. She believes many will try to stay illegally, putting themselves at even greater risk of abuse.

"Most of them don't have much to return to, so by making it impossible for them to stay legally, we are forcing them to go underground, in which case the risks of being mistreated are far more than without the protections under this program."

Migrant advocacy groups are calling for the government to process pending work permit applications and to offer a way for workers already in Canada to make the transition to permanent residency, providing a lifeline to those left in the lurch.

Wigan, who says she is happy at McDonald's, holds out little hope something will happen to allow her to stay and be reunited in Canada with her 12-year-old son, who lives with her husband in the Philippines.

"If I am not able to get my permanent residency, I will have to leave in October 2015. I don't think I have any choice." – Reuters, May 2, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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BBC rebukes ‘Top Gear’ presenter Clarkson over racist language

Posted: 02 May 2014 07:25 AM PDT

May 02, 2014

British state broadcaster, the BBC, has rebuked presenter Jeremy Clarkson (pic) over using racist language while filming car show "Top Gear", one of the most popular and profitable TV programmes in the world, but dismissed calls for his resignation.

Clarkson, 54, apologised after a newspaper report earlier this week revealed he used an epithet for blacks while reciting the rhyme "Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Moe" to choose between cars while filming two years ago.

The presenter, known for his humorous but brash, blunt style, released a video on Twitter yesterday apologising and saying he had tried to avoid the racist expression used in a well-known older version of the rhyme.

"I was mortified by this, horrified. It is a word that I loathe and I did everything in my power to make sure that version did not appear in the programme," said Clarkson, seen in the video brandishing a note to this effect sent to producers.

"As I am sitting here begging your forgiveness for the fact... obviously my efforts weren't quite good enough."

The version did not appear on the show and it was not clear how the Mirror newspaper, which first published the story, got a copy of the take.

The revelation prompted calls for Clarkson to resign or be sacked by the BBC, which is publicly funded by an annual licence fee of 145.50 pounds (RM812.50) that must be paid by all UK households with a television.

"I don't think the taxpayer should be subjected to people like Jeremy Clarkson who uses and insults people by his comments. It is time for him to go," opposition Labour MP Jim Sheridan from parliament's Culture, Media and Sports Committee said today.

Top Gear is one of the BBC's best-selling shows globally, broadcast in 214 countries. The show have made Clarkson, a journalist who writes newspaper columns as well as a presenter, into a global celebrity.

His strong views have pitched him up against politicians, national governments, green groups, car companies and communities across Britain over the years. Facebook has an "I Hate Jeremy Clarkson" page.

But the BBC has regularly downplayed any controversies about his comments and trod carefully this week. A spokeswoman said in a statement issued late on Thursday the corporation had spoken to Clarkson.

"We have made it absolutely clear to him, the standards the BBC expects on air and off. We have left him in no doubt about how seriously we view this," she said.

She declined to comment further on Friday and a spokesman for Clarkson told Reuters that the presenter was not expected to make any further comment.

The annual report of BBC Worldwide – the broadcaster's overseas sales branch – says Top Gear notched up the corporation's third title in the Guinness World Records, where it was named the world's most widely watched factual TV programme in 2013.

The show, which started in 1988, has sparked various spin-offs including video games, a game app and Top Gear magazine.

During 2012/13, the BBC said it had agreed new commercial deals with UK presenters Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond to ensure the show's future for the next three years.

The BBC declined to say how much Clarkson makes or how much "Top Gear" and its spin-offs earn for the company. – Reuters, May 2, 2014.

An evening of traditional Malaysian performing arts

Posted: 01 May 2014 11:54 PM PDT

May 02, 2014

Pusaka – a non-profit organisation dedicated to the research, documentation and revitalisation of traditional performing arts in Malaysia – will be holding a special talk on traditional performing arts  next Sunday, May 11, at the Black Box in Publika, Solaris Dutamas.

Founder Eddin Khoo will explore the contemporary social context and cultural politics that surround the traditional performing arts in Malaysia, in an effort to nurture a deeper appreciation for the country's heritage. The talk is open to the public and admission is free. Session begins at 4.00pm

The same evening will also see Pusaka presenting a Main Puteri performance from Kelantan for the public, featuring the renowned Tok Puteri, Che Mohd Zailani bin Che Moh, better known as Tok Mamat. Pusaka's Main Puteri will be held at the Black Box, Publika, as part of the monthly Pusaka Evenings at Publika.

Main Puteri is a healing performance tradition found mainly in the northeastern Malaysian state of Kelantan. It incorporates elements of dance, music, trance and ritual to cure patients suffering from emotional or spiritual illness.

In the Kelantanese worldview, such illnesses are due either to an attack by malign or unsettled spirits, a loss of semangat (soul or life-essence) or an imbalance of angin (inner wind) within a patient's body.

The principal figure in a Main Puteri performance is the tok puteri (medium) who serves as both spirit-medium and healer. He is assisted by a tok minduk who acts as a spirit-interrogator and is also the lead musician. As the tok puteri summons, into his own body, the spirit responsible for causing the patient's illness, the tok minduk questions the spirit to ascertain its identity and determine why the spirit is unsettled.

As the spirit takes possession of him, the tok puteri dances in a state of trance. Negotiations and offerings take place to appease the spirit to ensure that it will cease disturbing the patient. If the illness is due to loss of semangat or an imbalance of angin, the patient is encouraged to physically participate in the performance to bring about his or her emotional and spiritual release.

For more information on the talk and show, please contact: info@senipusaka.com. – May 2, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Pengurus ladang ditemui mati dengan kepala ditutup plastik

Posted: 02 May 2014 03:42 AM PDT

May 02, 2014

Seorang pengurus ladang ditemui mati pagi tadi dengan kepalanya ditutup plastik dan kaki serta tangannya diikat di Ladang Perhentian Tinggi, Jalan Seremban-Tampin dekat Seremban.

Mayat Lau Ah Kaw, 72, ditemui pekerjanya kira-kira 10 meter dari pagar rumah banglonya kira-kira pukul 6.30 pagi.

"Dia dipercayai keluar dari rumah pukul 6.20 pagi untuk ke pejabat ladang yang terletak kira-kira 500 meter dari rumahnya. Beberapa pekerja terdengar jeritannya dan bunyi bising dari bahagian depan pagar, namun tidak perasan apa-apa berlaku kerana keadaan sekitar yang gelap.

"Mereka kemudiannya menghubungi pengawal di pondok berdekatan pejabat itu dan menemui mangsa dalam keadaan sudah tidak bernyawa," kata seorang daripada pekerja berkenaan yang enggan dikenali.

Dompet mangsa dikatakan turut hilang.

Ketua Polis Daerah Seremban, ACP Zainal Abu mengesahkan penemuan mayat mangsa. – Bernama, 2 Mei, 2014.

SPR belum terima pemakluman rasmi mengenai kerusi Parlimen Teluk Intan

Posted: 02 May 2014 03:16 AM PDT

May 02, 2014

Suruhanjaya Pilihan Raya (SPR) masih belum menerima pemakluman rasmi daripada Yang Dipertua Dewan Rakyat berhubung kekosongan kerusi Parlimen Teluk Intan berikutan kematian ahli Parlimennya Seah Leong Peng semalam.

Pengerusi SPR Tan Sri Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (gambar) ketika dihubungi hari ini berkata pihaknya menjangka menerima pemakluman rasmi itu pada Isnin ini.

Mengikut Perkara 54 (1) Perlembagaan Persekutuan, pilihan raya kecil perlu diadakan bagi mengisi kekosongan kerusi berkenaan dalam tempoh 60 hari dari tarikh kekosongan yang diputuskan oleh SPR.

Selepas itu, SPR akan mengadakan satu mesyuarat khas untuk menetapkan tarikh hari penamaan calon dan hari mengundi bagi pilihan raya kecil.

Seah, 48, meninggal dunia di Pusat Perubatan Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur akibat kanser pada kira-kira 7.30 pagi semalam.

Pada Pilihan Raya Umum Ke-13, Seah menewaskan calon Barisan Nasional Datuk Mah Siew Keong dan calon bebas Moralingam Kannan dengan majoriti 7,313 undi. – Bernama, 2 Mei, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The water crisis shows Malaysia’s lack of true leaders

Posted: 01 May 2014 04:13 PM PDT

May 02, 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!

The water rationing in the Klang Valley has ended! It was so stressful keeping track of which days I could go to the toilet, and which days I had to hold it in. Shouldn't someone be resigning? (Much Relieved, via email)

Yes, indeed, at the time that this article is being written (or more accurately, at the time that His Supreme Eminenceness is mind-controlling one of his loyal minions to channel our thoughts and infinite wisdom and type them up on a computer), the official news is that the water rationing in the Klang Valley has come to an end.

News of the cessation of the water rationing exercise came as a surprise to many, as in the most recent days and weeks all talk seemed to be of prolonged drought and the ineffectiveness of the water rationing. Which all seemed a bit silly to ordinary Malaysians who had to contend with daily thunderstorms and flooding.

Unfortunately for Klang Valley residents, the many questions regarding the cause (or causes) of the water crisis seem destined to remain forever unanswered. All the parties involved seem intent on indulging in the hobby which has been consistently practiced by all Malaysian leaders and politicians – the art of taichi, also known as blame-shifting or finger-pointing.

Some Malaysians (yourself included, probably) have been talking about resignations in relation to the water crisis and the handling of the MH370 tragedy-mystery. No doubt you have been inspired to do so by the resignation of the South Korean Prime Minister in the wake of the ferry disaster there.

There is positive thinking, there is over-optimism, there is blind faith, and then there is sheer delusion. Anyone expecting a Malaysian leader or politician to resign as a matter of principle or as a sign of responsibility is very clearly in the "sheer delusion" zone.

So, finger-pointing it is then. The water concessionaires point the finger at the Selangor state government, who point the finger at the water concessionaires and the federal government, who point the finger at the state government. There has also been a recent (and unfortunately it looks like it will be a continuing) series of "opinion pieces" by politicians and political commentators gleefully sticking their pointy-fingers into the scene. Brace yourselves for more of these in the coming days and weeks.

As far as Lord Bobo is concerned, the politicians should be ashamed of themselves (yes, we mean those in the Federal and State administrations). In a supposedly democratic nation like Malaysia, the people are entitled to expect their elected representatives to have their best interests at heart.

The water rationing which Klang Valley residents have had to endure is nothing short of embarrassing. Water is a basic life necessity, and to have this basic need made unavailable for two-day cycles in the capital of what is supposed to be a developed nation is undeniably shocking. It was a crisis in every sense of the word.

And in a time of crisis, where were Malaysia's leaders? Does Malaysia even have true leaders? Politicians (who are supposed to be leaders) should be taking full responsibility, and being very public in assuring the people of the facts, and the steps that are being taken to ensure that the problems are solved as quickly as possible. There was a very obvious absence of any semblance of leadership.

Taking responsibility and exhibiting leadership qualities are two things which seem alien to Malaysian politicians. If anything, all of them seemed most keen to avoid being associated with the water crisis, as it may place them in a negative light. Disappointingly for many Malaysians, it seemed to show that perhaps the country wouldn't be that much different under opposition rule.

To answer your question, His Supreme Eminenceness does not expect anyone to be resigning anytime soon over this issue.

Although Lord Bobo already knows your question before you even knew you had a question, as a practical display of your true desire to have your query answered, His Supreme Eminenceness has graciously allowed you to communicate your questions by either emailing asklordbobo@loyarburok.com or tweeting your question, mentioning @LoyarBurok and using the hashtag #AskLordBobo. Now, what the hell are you waiting for? Hear This and Tremblingly Obey (although trembling is optional if you are somewhere very warm)! – May 2, 2014.

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

Street demos are meant to disrupt

Posted: 01 May 2014 03:57 PM PDT

May 02, 2014

Zan Azlee is a documentary filmmaker, journalist, writer, New Media practitioner and lecturer. He runs Fat Bidin Media www.fatbidin.com

Sometimes I think many in the country don't seem to get the concept of a street assembly, rally or demonstration.

I was watching a local television news programme two days ago and they had a news story whereby they interviewed the public regarding street demonstrations.

It was amusing to see the reactions of the people who were being interviewed. All of them seemed to have the opinion that street demonstrations caused trouble and disrupted daily lives.

They felt annoyed that traffic will be affected, businesses will be disrupted and whatnot. It seemed like they didn't appreciate the trouble it would cause them for that few hours.

Don't they realise that street demonstrations aim to do exactly that? They intentionally want to stop traffic, cause chaos to businesses and put a stop to daily operations.

They do this to attract attention to their activities, and more specifically, attract attention to whatever cause they are fighting for, so society and the authorities will do something about it.

But this will only happen if a big enough disruption is achieved. It won't work if only fifteen people turn up in the middle of the city to voice out their dissatisfactions.

How big of an impact would it be if only a handful of people stood on the sidewalk by the streets chanting and holding slogans as everyone else just walked by?

It needs a whole lot of people. Preferably in the tune of about 50,000 people or more. That would be a nice crowd to stop cars from driving on the streets and from work to go on as usual.

It will hopefully even attract some nice attention from the press, so more people would actually know what is happening and more awareness could be created.

But it isn't easy to galvanise such an enormous amount of people to come out at one time. Large successful street demonstrations happen very rarely.

It happens not because of any individual or group requested for it to happen. It happens because people actually want it to happen. And for so many people to want it, it must be due to a strong reason.

I doubt 50,000 or more people would suddenly want to gather together at the same time for a street demonstration without any strong reason at all.

So the next time people want to complain that street demonstrations aren't our "culture" or that these people just want to cause chaos in the country, think again really hard.

There must be something that pushed them to do what they are doing. You may or may not agree, but you can't deny that they have a voice and they have a right to use it. – May 2, 2014.

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

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