Members of the royalty are human beings too and not above
criticism. This is the view of former Perlis mufti Dr Asri Zainul Abidin
in his reaction to reports that former Perak Menteri Besar Nizar
Jamaluddin would be investigated for airing his opinion about paying a
hefty sum for car number plates.
"If the behaviour and actions of royalties cannot be questioned, we are only deifying them and subjugating ourselves," Asri (right) said in a posting on Twitter.
Asri however added that this applied to all situations and his comments were not specific to the controversy surrounding Nizar's tweets questioning the RM520,000 spent to secure ownership of the car registration number 'WWW1'.
The Road Transport Department (JPJ) on Monday revealed that the Sultan of Johor's bid for the number was the highest, alongside bids for other 'popular' numbers under the 'WWW' series.
Another monarch, the present Yang DiPertuan Agong, settled for the number 'WWW5' for a steep RM220,000.
Amidst reactions among netizens describing such purchase as 'wasteful', Nizar had twitted that the RM520,000 would have been better used to help the poor in the state. This invited a strong reaction from the crown prince of Johor, Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim, who justified the price of the number by saying that his family members had never taken "any money from the government".
Nizar (left) had since clarified that his comments were his personal view and not directed at anyone.
"That is merely my view as a citizen who observes the situation in this country, where many still live in poverty and need attention," Nizar reportedly said.
However, Johor police yesterday rushed to form a task force to investigate him for sedition, saying it was to "ensure justice".
The speed in which the Johor police acted upon the complaints against Nizar has also drawn flak, with comments by netizens on the country's high crime rate they said the authorities had failed to tackle.
Johor, a largely rural state, has one of the highest crime rates in the country, and often came out in the top three of states with most number of crimes, alongside other more urban states in the Klang Valley such as Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. In the past, negative remarks about the state's high crime rate had riled up local police and UMNO politicians.- harakahdaily
"If the behaviour and actions of royalties cannot be questioned, we are only deifying them and subjugating ourselves," Asri (right) said in a posting on Twitter.
Asri however added that this applied to all situations and his comments were not specific to the controversy surrounding Nizar's tweets questioning the RM520,000 spent to secure ownership of the car registration number 'WWW1'.
The Road Transport Department (JPJ) on Monday revealed that the Sultan of Johor's bid for the number was the highest, alongside bids for other 'popular' numbers under the 'WWW' series.
Another monarch, the present Yang DiPertuan Agong, settled for the number 'WWW5' for a steep RM220,000.
Amidst reactions among netizens describing such purchase as 'wasteful', Nizar had twitted that the RM520,000 would have been better used to help the poor in the state. This invited a strong reaction from the crown prince of Johor, Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim, who justified the price of the number by saying that his family members had never taken "any money from the government".
Nizar (left) had since clarified that his comments were his personal view and not directed at anyone.
"That is merely my view as a citizen who observes the situation in this country, where many still live in poverty and need attention," Nizar reportedly said.
However, Johor police yesterday rushed to form a task force to investigate him for sedition, saying it was to "ensure justice".
The speed in which the Johor police acted upon the complaints against Nizar has also drawn flak, with comments by netizens on the country's high crime rate they said the authorities had failed to tackle.
Johor, a largely rural state, has one of the highest crime rates in the country, and often came out in the top three of states with most number of crimes, alongside other more urban states in the Klang Valley such as Kuala Lumpur and Selangor. In the past, negative remarks about the state's high crime rate had riled up local police and UMNO politicians.- harakahdaily
WWW 1: Nizar Mohon Maaf...
Bekas Menteri Besar Perak, Datuk Seri Nizar Jamaluddin pada Rabu memohon maaf berhubung apa yang ditulis di Twitter mengenai nombor pendaftaran WWW 1 yang dibida Sultan Johor, Sultan Ibrahim Ismail yang menawarkan bidaan tertinggi sebanyak RM520,000.
Mesej permohonan maafnya di Twitter berbunyi:"Jika ada mana-mana pihak yang tergores hati dengan mesej Twitter itu, saya mohon maaf".
Katanya, kenyataan dalam Twitternya itu tidak bermaksud untuk mempertikaikan keputusan baginda Sultan Johor.
Sebaliknya, kata beliau, kenyataan itu dibuat secara umum atas pandangan seorang rakyat.
“Jika ada yang menuduh saya menghina Sultan, itu sudah keterlaluan, kerana saya tiada niat untuk berbuat demikian.
“Itu hanya pandangan saya sebagai rakyat biasa yang melihat senario di negara ini bahawa masih ramai yang hidup dalam kesempitan dan memerlukan perhatian,” katanya kepada akhbar Sinar Harian.- mStar
cheers.
1 comment:
mengabih boghai yo buek task sanun task senen since it is just a harmless comment. Buek la bebnyk laiee rakyat bukan nyo buto..Kek India pn 'Raja kapoor' dah wujud. Kes bahaso yg digunakan si Aduka Taruna pn lagi taruk dan boleh tolopeh.. dah takdak kojo kot PRDM ni
Post a Comment