Malaysia LAH

Malaysia LAH 3



Showing posts with label malaysia boleh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label malaysia boleh. Show all posts

Friday, 15 April 2016

GST proves to be unpopular topic at Workers’ Day gathering in Kuching 2015

GST proves to be unpopular topic at Workers’ Day gathering in Kuching 2015


BY SULOK TAWIE

KUCHING, May 1 — At a national-level Workers’ Day gathering here, the prime minister got a first-hand feel of how unpopular the Goods and Services Tax (GST) is.

Datuk Seri Najib Razak was booed when he touched briefly on the GST when addressing the crowd at the Borneo Convention Centre Kuching (BCCK) today.

  “The GST is for the good of the country’s development,” he said. This was immediately greeted by boos from some workers in the back of the hall.
Unperturbed, Najib carried on with his speech.
“We have no intention to burden the people. We are always looking at ways and means to help them,” he said, adding the government would take care of the welfare of the workers in the country accordingly.
“If our country is getting wealthy and our national income increases, we want all workers to benefit.
“Without the role played by the workers, our country will not succeed or become more wealthy,” he said.
Asked to comment on the behaviour of the workers later, Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri Richard Riot said, “The word GST, I think, is very unpopular with the people, but the blame must be on the traders for the rise in prices of many goods.”
He said over 2,000 goods are not covered by GST, but the traders charged six per cent GST across the board on all goods.
“My point is that GST is a good policy, but the traders are manipulating it to make more profit, even on goods which are not covered by GST,” he said.
He felt that the government, especially the Customs Department, needs to explain more on the implementation of GST.

“But then again, no amount of explanation will be enough as long as the traders continue to manipulate GST to make more profits,” he said.
http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/gst-proves-to-be-unpopular-topic-at-workers-day-gathering-in-kuching

Wednesday, 4 June 2014

NEW SCAM - Express Couriers

NEW SCAM 

Just when you think you've heard it all. Here comes another scam. This scam is very clever. Be very careful out there! One could easily fall for this - beware of people bearing gifts! 

There is a new and clever credit card scam. Please circulate this. Someone it happened to says it works like this:


Wednesday a week ago, I had a phone call from someone who said that he was from some outfit called: "Express Couriers" asking if I was going to be home because there was a package for me, and the caller said that the delivery would arrive at my home in roughly an hour. And sure enough, about an hour later, a uniformed delivery man turned up with a beautiful basket of flowers and wine. I was very surprised since it did not involve any special occasion or holiday and I certainly didn't expect anything like it. Intrigued about who would send me such a gift, I inquired as to who the sender is. The delivery man's reply was, he was only delivering the gift package but allegedly a card was being sent separately; (the card has never arrived!). There was also a consignment note with the gift. 


He then went on to explain that because the gift contained alcohol, there was a $3.50 "delivery charge" as proof that he had actually delivered the package to an adult and not just left it on the doorstep where it could be stolen or taken by anyone. 


This sounded logical and I offered to pay him cash. He then said that the company required the payment to be by credit or debit card only so that everything is properly accounted for. 


My husband, who by this time was standing beside me, pulled his wallet out of his pocket with the credit/debit card and 'John', the "delivery man", asked my husband to swipe the card on the small mobile card machine which had a small screen and keypad where Frank was also asked to enter the card's PIN and security number. A receipt was printed out and given to us. 


To our horrible surprise, between Thursday and the following Monday, $4,000 had been charged/withdrawn from our credit/debit account at various ATM machines. 


It appeared that somehow the "mobile credit card machine" which the delivery man carried now had all the info necessary to create a "dummy" card with all our card details after my husband swiped our card and entered the requested PIN and security number. 


Upon finding out about the illegal transactions on our card, we immediately notified the bank which issued us the card and our credit/debit account was closed. 


We also personally went to the Police, where it was confirmed that it is definitely a scam because several households had been similarly hit. 

WARNING: Be wary of accepting any "surprise gift or package", which you neither expected nor personally ordered, especially if it involves any kind of payment as a condition of receiving the gift or package. Also, never accept anything if you do not personally know or there is no proper identification of who the sender is. 

Above all, the only time you should give out any personal credit/debit card information is when you yourself initiated the purchase or transaction! 

If you pass this on, it may just prevent someone else from being swindled!


Saturday, 24 May 2014

Indie runner Abu Backer quits Bukit Gelugor on eve of polls

Indie runner Abu Backer quits Bukit Gelugor on eve of polls


GEORGE TOWN, May 24 — Just hours before the campaign period for Bukit Gelugor by-election ends, Independent candidate Abu Backer Sidek Mohammad Zan announced his decision to pull out from the four-cornered fight.
The controversial lawyer, who had drawn attention after he threw himself in front of the Penang chief minister’s car on Tuesday, said he was disappointed at how his efforts at campaigning was blocked at every way.
“I’m disappointed with all this. I’m withdrawing from the contest,” he said at his very first and last ceramah at Padang Suria Kampung Melayu early this evening.
Abu Backer had earlier today claimed that his campaign was “sabotaged” at every turn, ranging from not being able to park his rented caravan in front of the hotel he is staying to being denied permits to hold ceramah in public areas.
“I have applied to hold ceramah at so many places, in Farlim, in Air Itam, in Kampung Melayu, but not one got approved,” he said at a news conference this morning.
However, one of his applications was approved today, which enabled him to hold a ceramah at about 7.30pm where he dropped the bombshell.
“I’m not feeling well, I don’t want to talk about it anymore,” he told The Malay Mail Online when contacted later.
In his brief ceramah, he had also said that he won’t be around in Penang tomorrow and that he will take his supporters to Langkawi.
Questioned about his Langkawi plan later, Abu Backer told The Malay Mail Online that he was just joking.
“It was just a joke. Maybe I will hold a press conference tomorrow to explain further on this,” he said.
According to state Election Commission deputy director Mohd Faiz Shazwan Zainal Abidin, candidates can’t withdraw after nomination day.
He added that the ballot papers have already been printed so Abu Backer’s name and horse logo will still be there.
This means the ballot papers will still have four names and logos — Parti Cinta Malaysia Huan Cheng Guan, DAP Ramkarpal Singh Deo, Abu Backer with the horse logo and Mohd Nabi Bux Mohd Sathar with the hibiscus logo.
The Bukit Gelugor parliamentary seat was vacated after the late MP Karpal Singh was killed in a car crash last month.
There are a total 82,431 registered voters in the constituency.
 https://my.news.yahoo.com/indie-runner-abu-backer-quits-bukit-gelugor-eve-150000747.html

Saturday, 16 March 2013

DAP clear Nga of ‘lounge-suit’ corruption accusations


DAP clear Nga of ‘lounge-suit’ corruption accusations

February 16, 2012
KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 16 — The DAP disciplinary committee cleared Pantai Remis assemblyman Nga Kor Ming of any power abuse in the awarding of a lounge suit contract to his wife’s company, Bernama Online reported.
Committee chairman Tan Kok Wai said their investigations did not  find any evidence he coerced or influenced Ipoh City Hall (MBI) in his capacity as councillor to award the RM14,400 contract to Ethan & Elton — co-owned by Nga’s spouse Wong Seow Ching.
Tan said the committee felt the existence of a relationship between parties did not prove wrongdoing meriting an actionable complaint.
He told media their decision at the DAP headquarters here after a three hour meeting.
Three former MBI councillors who were also on the tender board, Frankie Wong and Simon Ng from DAP and PAS’s Khairuddin Abd Malik, told the committee that they were not aware Nga’s wife was involved with the company when they made their award decision.
Tan added that there were five other bidders along with Ethan and Elton.
The committee also rejected the “minit bebas” (independent minutes) presented to them, because the ex-Mentri Besar and six ex- state excos from the previous Pakatan Rakyat state government have confirmed to the disciplinary committee they have never proposed or discussed the lounge suit contract at their exco meetings.
The committee therefore was of the opinion that Nga (picture) neither did anything corrupt nor breached party discipline.
In the separate issue of a demonstration outside the Penang DAP state convention allegedly backed by Penang deputy chief minister II P. Ramasamy, Tan said the committee had not come to a decision, and that the matter will be discussed at the next meeting.
 http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/dap-clear-nga-of-lounge-suit-corruption-accusations

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Stadium Collapse: Architect Doubts Capability Of Workers

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Stadium Collapse: Architect Doubts Capability Of Workers

Thursday, 21 February 2013 08:58

PUTRAJAYA: Architect Raja Datuk Kamarul Bahrin Shah Raja Ahmad, who designed the Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin Stadium in Kuala Terengganu, once again questioned the state government after another section of the roof fell through yesterday morning. 
Alluding to the contractors involved in the current project, he asked whether they are qualified enough since the incident happened while the stadium is currently undergoing re-construction work.
According to Bernama report, five workers were injured, three seriously, when steel structures supporting the roof of the stadium collapsed at 11.30am yesterday.

Raja Kamarul Bahrin wanted to know why it took so long to dismantle the remaining roof, as it would only be a matter time before history repeated itself.

"Were they qualified to dismantle the roof?" he asked when contacted by fz.com.

He stressed that dismantling of the remaining frame should have been carried out by the original Korean contractors who were responsible for the design, supply and the installation of the roof.

He added that the state government cannot blame anyone for today's incident as he had been warning them of such possibilities since the first incident four years ago.

On June 2, 2009, part of the roof collapsed at the stadium's grandstand a year after it opened for the Malaysia Games (Sukma) in 2008, but no one was hurt then while repair works started at the end of last year.

On today's incident, Terengganu deputy police chief Datuk Hamzah Mohd Jamil said workers were dismantling the old roof structure when the incident happened.

"About 137m or two thirds of the old structure collapsed when eight workers were carrying out work at the site," he said.

Meanwhile, Bernama also reported that one of the victims, Safian Abdul Manaf, 21, said the incident happened so fast that he could not do anything.

Safian said he was trying to shift a steel frame that was 137 meters long and 25 meters high when he saw the frame fall and pin him down.

He broke his right leg, injured his mouth and lost his teeth.

"It happened about an hour after I started work. I managed to see the frame falling but I couldn't do anything. It happened so fast. 

"When I fell, my face knocked against a wall (terrace) and I passed out. When I regained conscious I was in an ambulance," he said when met at the Sultanah Nur Zahirah
Hospital.

Apart from Safian, Mohd Nazirul Nizam Marzuki, 25, (right knee injury) and Mohd Saidi Ismail, 21, (back injury) were also admitted while Mohd Syukri Jusuh, 31, and Wan Mohd Fajrulazmi Wan Ahmad, 26, suffered minor injuries.



- Sean Augustin / fz.com
http://fz.com/content/stadium-architect-doubts-capability-workers

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

Malaysia has great potential in medical tourism

Wednesday September 26, 2012

Malaysia has great potential in medical tourism


KUALA LUMPUR: Medical tourism has been identified as having the potential of being a revenue generator for the country due to the response shown by foreigners who seek quality healthcare services.
Foreigners come to Malaysia for medical tourism due to the low costs of healthcare services, complemented by existence of excellent medical technology and infrastructure.
The outcome of a survey conducted by a foreign-based body reveals that heart procedures conducted in Malaysia are 10 times cheaper than those conducted in the United States.
Indonesian tourists comprise the highest number of those seeking Malaysian healthcare services followed by visitors from Arab nations.
Efforts by Malacca to boost the number of Indonesian tourists seeking healthcare services in the state appear to be bearing fruit as more Indonesians are switching their attention from Singapore to Malacca for such services.
Statistics show that in 2010, some 60% of 280,000 tourists to Malaysia went to Malacca for medical treatment while Kuala Lumpur is the destination of choice for Arab tourists. According to KPJ Healthcare (KPJ) managing director Datin Paduka Siti Sa'adiah Sheikh Bakir, Arab visitors made up 8% of tourists who sought healthcare services at the group's hospitals.
KPJ is Malaysia's largest group of private hospitals.
“Many foreigners choose Malaysia for elective medical procedures particularly cancer, orthopaedic and cosmetic treatment,” she said after launching the Arab Community Day at KPJ Tawakal Hospital here recently.
As the Arabs prefer Malaysia as their destination for shopping, Siti Sa'adiah said that it was time for Malaysia to promote the medical tourism sector aggressively. “KPJ has been actively promoting its services to the Arab community for more than 10 years now,” she said. - Bernama

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/9/26/business/12081267&sec=business

Monday, 24 December 2012

Chua: Why didn’t A-G raise concerns earlier?

Wednesday December 19, 2012


PETALING JAYA: Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek is surprised by the Attorney-General's Chambers' move to freeze all court proceedings related to summonses issued under the Automated Enforcement System (AES).
“I am sure the Government has obtained views from the A-G's Chambers before they rolled out the AES,” the MCA president said. “So, why didn't the A-G raise any concern at that time? Why now?
“I am sure the A-G then gave his OK and now, have backpedalled.”
Dr Chua said due to this, the Government would now need to come up with a mechanism to reimburse those who had paid their summonses.
He reiterated the party's stand that there should be a six-month trial and education period for motorists so as to sort out all legalities.

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/12/19/nation/12480039&sec=nation

CAUGHT WITH PANTS DOWN, S'gor BN rushes to pass 'land-grab' buck to

CAUGHT WITH PANTS DOWN, S'gor BN rushes to pass 'land-grab' buck to
each other
Written by Tony Pua



<http://www.malaysia-chronicle.com/media/k2/items/cache/dd07b26e3dfb4d4fd4ab
212d876ded3e_XL.jpg>

It is so hopelessly hilarious to see how UMNO Selangor leaders
scrambling to disclaim responsibility and knowledge over their role in
the state land grab scandal.
We have on Tuesday exposed a 87,188 square feet of land which was
given to UMNO Subang at dirt cheap nominal prices in Ara Damansara in
2004. This piece of land has since been developed into a 200-unit
Suria Damansra Condomium launched in 2006. This condominium is worth
an estimated RM90 million based on today's prices.
UMNO and MCA state assemblymen, Abdul Shukor Idrus and Wong Koon Mun
had explained during the last state assembly sitting that the land
they received on the cheap were used for the community, such as
kindergartens or public community halls.
We had called on them to explain where exactly is the kindergarten and
the community halls in this 87,188 sq ft of land. This is the first of
the 24 parcels of land which we will expose as a clear cut case of
abuse of power and corruption by the Barisan Nasional government
during their reign from 2000 to 2008.
Caught with their pants down
Having been caught with their pants down, UMNO leaders are now
fumbling to deny their complicity in the land-grab, and blame other
UMNO leaders.
When contacted by the press, Subang Umno division chief Muhammad
Bushro Mat Johor, said there is no such land in possession of Subang
Umno. "No, there is not even a single piece of land listed in Subang
Umno's asset list since I became the division chief," he said. However
when pressed with evidence, the Paya Jaras assemblyperson pointed that
any query on the land is best directed to the previous division chief.
However, the previous division chief, Datuk Mokhtar Dahlan when
queried, then passed the buck to Kelana Jaya Umno acting chief Yahya
Bujang. He claimed that although it was Subang UMO which received the
land, "the land was handed over to Kelana Jaya Umno after a
constituency re-delineation exercise in 2004."
Unfortunately, and coincidentally, Yahya Bujang is out of the country
and is hence unable to respond immediately to the allegations. Datuk
Mokhtar Dahlan had disclosed however, that the land was originally
intended for the construction of UMNO Subang's Division Headquarters.
It is a clear admission that BN had abused its powers to benefit the
interest of its component parties.
At the same time, the Opposition Leader in Selangor Datuk Satim Diman
pleaded ignorance when queried and responded that said the matter
should be referred instead to Umno Selangor secretary Datuk Mohd Zin
Mohamed.
Mohd Zin, then with great finesse , responded that he "needs some time
and will respond in due time after his researcher gathers more
information on the allegation."
Biggest disappointment: Total silence from Najib
The passing the buck game cannot be any more comical than the above.
UMNO knows that they've been caught red-handed putting their hands
into cookie jar, and no one wants to accept responsibility for robbing
the people's land for their own profit.
The biggest disappointment for all Malaysians, and particularly
Selangorians, is the fact that the Prime Minister has remained
steadfastly silent on the above issue, despite his insistence that
UMNO has "transformed". Datuk Seri Najib Razak who is also the
Selangor UMNO Chief must get his house in order by explaining the land
grab scandal and accepting responsility for UMNO's sins. He must make
amends for UMNO's corrupt policies of the past be returning all such
ill-gained profits to the state government for the benefit of the
rakyat.

Tony Pua is the DAP MP for PJ Utara

Friday, 21 December 2012

2012 Corruption Perceptions Index: Malaysia Up 6 Spots From Last Year


Corruption index: Malaysia’s ranking keeps sliding

Wednesday, 21 November 2012

Who’s in charge of Malaysian democracy?

Who’s in charge of Malaysian democracy?
 November 13, 2012 Nov 13 ―

 It has been psychologically proven that it is human instinct to attribute anything bad to one’s surrounding. For example, if I baked a cake and it failed for whatever reason, I would instinctively and firstly seek out the problem from the ingredients that I’ve used, or a bad oven, or the recipe. It will usually take a while before I would acknowledge that the failure was due to a mistake on my part, or maybe, that I simply lack the necessary skills. Again, note that the aforesaid relates to human instinct.

 One may acknowledge personal fault at a later point, but the first reaction would always usually be to seek the problem in one’s surroundings. So, coming back to the topic ― what is Malaysian democracy?


To break the question down a little ― where does Malaysian democracy take place? The first answer to this would be that it is exercised at the ballot box. The second answer to this may be that it is exercised when there is a protest. But is that all there is to Malaysian democracy? Surely, its exercise cannot be so occasional.

 Yet, if Malaysians have been exercising their right to democracy, why and how have we been subject to a degenerating regime for the past 50-odd years?

 We speak of change, but our concept of change can only materialise at the ballot box. In other words, we can only change once every five years. What about protests? Must democracy only happen when a group of people decides to take the people’s voice to the streets? And say, if no one decides to rally up the people, is our only other option for change at the ballot box?

Is representative democracy our only option? Our reaction to this degenerating regime would instinctively be the fact that our leaders are lacking in competence, and that it is their fault that we are in the position that we are in. But, tying this back in with the opening paragraph of this article ― is this really the case?

 Is Malaysia degenerating because of what our leaders are doing to us? Or are we degenerating because of what we fail to do? In a situation where the Malaysian leadership does not change, what other option do we have?

 A simple analysis of our leadership structure will show that there are several avenues for the lay Malaysian to be involved in our country’s policy-making decisions. All of us have been allocated one member of the state legislative assembly and one Member of Parliament to speak on our behalf at the different levels of government. With this in sight, participatory democracy becomes far more feasible.

Opinions of local communities can simply be gathered and submitted to the leader that the community has voted in. Contrasting this to our former idea of democracy, this other option for continual accountability would seem more manageable and therefore feasible. Putting the effect of the aforesaid into perspective – what this means is that the needs and wants of local communities for specific policies will be heard by the designated leaders.

There will be a clear request from the voters of the constituencies to hold their leaders accountable to. And depending on what the leader says or does in reaction to these requests, local communities can then decide on what else to do – should the leader respond favourably to the request, the community would have reason to be satisfied with his leadership; and should the leader decide to not respond to the request, the community can properly seek out the reasons for such decisions and correspondingly take further action or make the necessary assessment of his leadership.

 The important point, therefore, is this: that by doing so, communities will be able to measure the performance of their leaders, and leaders will be able to measure the specific needs of their communities. In relation to communities – they will then be able to determine how and why the leader has succeeded or failed; and in relation to leaders, they will then know whether or not they have failed. As to the latter, should the leader be put in the realisation that he has failed his community, he will likewise be put in the lingering realisation that his future as a leader may come to an end.

 In short, we can only say that one has failed to fulfill our request when there has been a request made in the first place. Malaysia, there is a need to depart from our unrealistic and immature ways of putting the onus on our leaders to gauge our interests and needs when we to not take the personal responsibility of voicing them out in the first place. Democracy is a two-way communication. It is a continual two-way communication. Malaysia, we say that this is our country.

 It’s time to start acting as we claim. * The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

Being told to remove their trousers by teachers – students confessed that he wasn’t wearing any underwear

Being told to remove their trousers by teachers – students confessed that he wasn’t wearing any underwear JOHOR BAHRU – Their crime?

Uploading a video clip of themselves on YouTube after finishing their SPM exam paper. Their punishment? Being told to remove their trousers by teachers, even after one of the students confessed that he wasn’t wearing any underwear. In addition, they subjected the students to 700 push-ups as well as multiple slaps, kicks and punches by three teachers, Harian Metro reported.

 The incident is believed to have occurred last Monday, when the students had just returned to their dormitory at 5.30pm after spending time at a nearby shopping mall. When they returned, they were confronted by three teachers. It is alleged that the teachers were angry at the students for uploading a video of themselves on YouTube after completing their SPM mathematics paper.

 The roughly three-minute clip, uploaded on Nov 5, had depicted the antics of the students blowing off steam after their exam paper by copying a skit by a popular reality TV program. A father to one of the students, who only wished to be known as Amir, 47, described the teachers’ actions as overboard, and did not even appear to be educational in nature.

 “I was told of the incident by the father of a fellow student. As a result of trauma from the incident, my son has now become withdrawn,” he said. He said he first noticed behavioural changes in his son when the family visited him at the school last Thursday. He said the son acted out of the ordinary and was non-communicative throughout the visit. Amir said he was disappointed by the teachers’ actions, which he claimed was unprofessional and based on emotions.

 “Granted, teachers have the authority to punish students, but it should be within reason. Going overboard can lead to stress which can affect students emotions and performance of the students, who are sitting for their SPM,” said Amir, who hails from Kulaijaya. Amir said he has watched the video clip and felt it contained neither sensitive material, nor did it tarnish the school’s name in any way. He said he didn’t understand why the teachers lost their cool when the students were merely “releasing stress.”

 “I’m disappointed. It wasn’t enough that they dished out such humiliating punishment, but the teachers also threatened to blacklist the students SPM certificates if they told their parents about this,” he said. Amir lodged a report on the incident at the Sentral police station yesterday. “I want justice for my son and I hope the police as well as the relevant authorities will investigate this,” he said.

 Meanwhile, Deputy Education Minister Dr Mohd Puad Zarkashi, when contacted, said his office was still awaiting a full report of the incident. “We will, however, investigate these claims so we can carry out further action,” he said. - mD

 http://www.kualalumpurpost.net/being-told-to-remove-their-trousers-by-teachers-students-confessed-that-he-wasnt-wearing-any-underwear/

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

made in malaysia

Malaysia wishes to become a high-income country.

 The following are true stories: A Malaysian political leader had a heart surgery in Singapore. The operation was successful.

During his recuperation period, the political leader would like to thank 3 skilful doctors, including an anesthesiologist. He said: “Thanks to the Singaporean doctors..........”

 “I'm sorry, Sir. I'm from Malaysia,” interrupted a doctor. “Me too.” “Me as well.” x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x A Malaysian company wanted to develop a new town abroad, it entrusted the project to a Singapore multinational company. The first time when they met, the Singapore company sent a team of seven people, including the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Architect and Chief Finance Executive. The meeting went smoothly. They relaxed and chatted.

The Malaysian company's Director said, “Durians from my hometown Kuala Pilah, Seremban taste the best. I'll treat you all next time when you come.” “Really? What area in Kuala Pilah? I'm from Kuala Pilah, too!” said the Singapore company's Chief Executive Officer. Next, one by one, the other six from the Singaporean team revealed their identities “I'm from Malacca.” “I'm from Kuala Kangsar, Perak.” “I grew up in Segamat.”

“My hometown is...” And all of them were actually “Made in Malaysia ”. x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x There are countless similar stories around us. And there is always another story behind each story. Some were rejected by domestic universities while some were rejected by the government scholarship. They couldn't get it even with 10 As while others got only 10 Bs. As leaving might be better than staying, they just went to a different world after crossing the bridge. There is a deep feeling for every story. x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x

According to the Malaysian Employers Federation (MEF) statistics, a total of about 785,000 Malaysians are currently working abroad and 44% of them are working in Singapore, while the rest are working in other countries, including Hong Kong, China, Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States. And two-thirds of them are professionals. At the same time, most of the 2 million guest workers in Malaysia are from Indonesia, Bangladesh, Myanmar, India and Vietnam.

They are engaged in labour industry which does not require high educational background but just a little bit of brains. Low skill, low knowledge and of course, low wages. Malaysia has become a country that exports brains while importing labours, resulting in a serious deficit in knowledge trade.

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

27 YEARS IN THE SHADOWS: Koon Swan was a victim of Umno's "black hand" - Jui Meng

Wednesday, 12 September 2012 00:53

27 YEARS IN THE SHADOWS: Koon Swan was a victim of Umno's "black hand" - Jui Meng

Written by  Wong Choon Mei, Malaysia Chronicle     


UPDATED Former MCA president Tan Koon Swan was a victim of Umno's "black hand" and the Malaysian Chinese should cheer the recent admission by Singapore's former public prosecutor that Koon Swan had been wrongly charged and jailed because it vindicates the community as a whole.
"Koon Swan was the fastest rising Chinese leader. He held in his hand the hope and aspirations of the entire community. They trusted him implicitly. His youthfulness and dynamism set him a class above the other leaders. This is why he became a target of the Umno elite - for the tremendous hope he brought to the Chinese," PKR vice president Chua Jui Meng told Malaysia Chronicle.
"Like Anwar Ibrahim in 90s, Koon Swan in the 80s represented reform in all sectors - a more equitable economy, society and educational opportunities. He was a brilliant man and for this, Umno chopped him down cruelly. Koon Swan was publicly mutilated, his reputation was smashed to smithereens. Why? Because he did not toe the line set by the Umno bosses and they feared his power and influence over the Chinese."
Accomplices in greed
Indeed, amongst those who follow the political development of the Malaysian Chinese, grousing at the injustice heaped upon Koon Swan is not new. The bitterness was widespread and deep but in the 1980s, former premier Mahathir Mohamad ruled with a fist of iron, freely using the Internal Security Act and Sedition laws to jail political opponents and shut out criticism.
His greatest accomplices were former Finance minister Daim Zainuddin and the mainstream media, which continuously churned out stories to portray the situation that Mahathir deemed most useful to his plans. It did not help that Mahathir refused to grant licenses to independent press organizations, and until the advent of the Internet, news that carried a neutral or pro-Opposition picture did not exist in Malaysia.
Koon Swan was labelled as a vile traitor who not only betrayed his community but also swindled their poor, many of whom lost their life savings when the MCA-linked co-operatives they placed money with crumbled.
"The truth is always stranger than fiction and God moves in mysterious ways. No one expected Glenn Knight to show remorse and to write about all his old cases. And Glenn did not just mention Koon Swan but also other big cases he prosecuted on behalf of his government. Maybe Singapore didn't like a dynamic young leader who can rival the likes of Lee Kuan Yew. It reacted harshly and threw the book at Koon Swan. I was in Singapore with him at that time and we approached a UK law expert who told us Koon Swan had solid grounds to fight the Singapore case but in the end he buckled," said Jui Meng.
"He could not take the pressure. We will never know what else he and his family were threatened with until they tell us, but for sure he was a victim and it was Umno which led the push to crucify and to bury him. This is the history that Malaysian Chinese, especially the young, must know. Koon Swan's record on the Pan-El incident and how he was forced to give up the MCA presidency must be set straight. I am not trying to make him a hero. He had his scandals but he did not betray the Chinese. For years, his jailing has been used a mark of shame to show that Chinese leaders betrayed their people especially the poor. Many in the MCA did do that but not all. Each time, Umno wanted to crow over the Chinese, they would point the finger at Koon Swan and Pan-El. Now, the truth is out loud and clear - it was not him. It was the Umno elite and apart from politics, there was greed. They wanted the money in the MCA and its crown jewel Multi-Purpose Holdings Bhd."
Black mark on the community lifted

Jui Meng, a former MCA vice president and Health Minister, was responding to the uproar raised by Glenn Knight's recently published book "Glenn Knight: The Prosecutor". The former top legal eagle admitted he had wrongly prosecuted Koon Swan in the 1985 Pan El Industries case.
Glenn said he felt pained for putting Koon Swan behind bars on discovering his mistake years later, and he had since apologised to Koon Swan. The admission made the top news in all the major Chinese papers in Malaysia.
Koon Swan was slapped with 15 charges of fraud, cheating, stock market manipulation and abetment of criminal breach of trust (CBT) in the collapse of Pan El. He was sentenced to 18 months jail and fined S$500,000 (RM1.2 million) upon conviction in 1986.
Despite quitting as the MCA president and serving out his Singapore sentence, the Malaysian authorities were not appeased. He was jailed again when he returned and made a bankrupt as well.
"It was the worst humiliation for any man to endure but Koon Swan bore his cross with courage and dignity. He was 10 years too early, but we hope he will speak out now. In 1998, Anwar was in a better position to fight back against guys like Mahathir and Daim. Even still, look at how he suffered, I really take my hat off to Anwar," said Jui Meng.
"Perhaps now, Malaysians can understand how much courage it takes to fight the evil in our political system. When I talk about the the fight between Good and Evil, I can sense some people think I am exaggerating. But make no mistake, the fight is still on and in fact at the very peak. Malaysians must reject Evil in Umno-BN. They must always choose to follow the light and never darkness."
Paving the way for assets to be sold cheaply?
Jui Meng slammed the "vindictiveness" of the Mahathir administration for the second-round of punishment inflicted on Koon Swan. He believes that it was not only to ensure that the disgraced MCA president could never make any political comeback but to pave the way for the takeover and asset-stripping of the MCA companies and properties.
"Multi-Purpose was a huge conglomerate that could affect East Asian markets. It held the Malaysian French Bank, Bandaraya, large tracts of plantations and estates. It also had shipping interests. Yet Ling Liong Sik who took over as the new MCA president had to sell it off for a mere RM500 million. It was easily worth several times more," said Jui Meng.
"Who was behind the purchase? Many have alleged it was Daim because he had Mahathir's ear at that time. In the Umno style of those days, the word was spread to the Malays through the vernacular papers and the grapevine that the Malay community would benefit from Koon Swan's fall. But I think the only people who gained were the Umno elite. Their greed got worse and worse until Daim himself has been accused of taking Umno's assets and keeping these for himself. It is a classic example of the political and economic hegemony the Umno elite has enforced on the rakyat (people)."
Cowed and demoralized
Now 72, Koon Swan made his political debut, winning a parliamentary seat in Raub, Pahang. The following year, he was elected to the party's Central Committee and appointed Chairman of MCA Wilayah Persekutuan State Liaison Committee. In 1982 he clinched a landslide victory in the Damansara parliamentary seat, beating the Opposition in their fortress.
In 1984, he was appointed as vice-president of the MCA. However, he was soon sacked from this post along with 13 other members for urging the party to investigate its member records for the presence of non-existent people, an issue that had sparked off factionalism and crisis within the MCA. Koon Swan and the other 13 were all reinstated two months later with the support of 1,600 MCA members in an extraordinary general meeting.
In November 1985, Koon Swan was voted as president of the MCA, winning 76.9% of the votes cast, the largest majority in the party's history, and the first challenger since 1954 to win national leadership.
Koon Swan was then at the height of his popularity, symbolizing a new breed of Chinese leaders - smart, savvy and people-oriented. The Chinese community was indeed riding high buoyed by the enormous economic clout wielded by the MCA and talented Chinese leaders such as Koon Swan, who tapped and leveraged on the overseas diaspora, using to the fullest advantage powerful business contacts in both Hong Kong and China.
Regarded as a financial wizard Koon Swan also originated the Deposit-Taking Cooperatives or DTCs, which sought to accumulate capital for the Malaysian Chinese through investments. But with the onset of the 1985-86 recession triggered by plunging world oil and palm oil prices plus Koon Swan's own troubles, mismanagement of the DTCs' funds led to a scandal with the central Bank Negara stepping in to freeze the assets of up to 35 DTCs. The total loss was estimated to be RM3.6 billion, and the depositors only recovered 62% of their deposits.
The Pan-El case and its outcome not only changed his fate and the MCA's but also greatly impacted on the Malaysian Chinese community. They were visibly demoralized and cowed by his jailing. Many turned against him and his second wife Penny Chang, blaming them for the hard times sparked by the DTCs' fall and the slide in the economy, which contracted by 1.2% in 1985.
Pardon
Pan El's collapse also caused the Singapore and Malaysian stock markets to halt trading for three days. The high-profile Pan El case resulted in Glenn Knight being awarded the Public Administration Gold Medal.
In the book, the 63-year-old Glenn had written about the many high-profile cases he handled. He said that in 1996, a case similar to Koon Swan's came up for hearing and Singapore Chief Justice Yong Pung How "concluded that I was wrong to charge Tan for the offence".
“It was extremely painful for me to suddenly discover that the Singapore courts had got it wrong. It was a highly significant case that led to enforceable regulations being introduced into Singapore's stockbroking industry. As Koon Swan was the head of the MCA, I put up a paper on his involvement in the Pan-El saga but left it to my superiors to decide his fate as he was out of (Singapore) and in Malaysia. In the end, the government decided that the CAD could prosecute Koon Swan,” Glenn wrote.
“Chief Justice Yong was of the opinion that the section I had charged Koon Swan with was wrong in law for we could not charge a person for stealing from a company because as a director, it was not a breach of the law in that sense. Chief Justice Yong concluded that it was wrong to convict anyone for stealing money if the wrong charge had been used to begin with. The judgment shattered my belief in our legal system. In the United Kingdom, such a landmark judgment would have set aside Koon Swan's conviction but our jurisprudence does not allow for this though technically, Koon Swan could still have been granted a pardon."
Glenn also told of how he apologized to Koon Swan in 2010. He said Koon Swan was very emotional on hearing the matter.
In 1991, Glenn himself was charged with CBT and later jailed in Singapore. He was struck off from practising law in 1994 but was reinstated in the Law Society of Singapore in 2007.
As for Koon Swan, who is currently overseas, he has said he would decline comment until he has read Glenn's book.
Malaysia Chronicle