Ianya tidak mendatangkan kerugian apa2. Jika tawaran Anwar Ibrahim untuk berdamai tidak dilayan, tidak mengapa. Jika pimpinan UMNO enggan, janganlah puak Anwar Ibrahim hidung tak mancung, pipi tersorong sorong.
UMNO akan terbenam dalam PRU14 nanti. Kita akan lawan UMNO sampai ia kalah. Apa yang perlu dilakukan ialah menunjukkan dasar yang UMNO jalankan menyusahkan orang Melayu. 75% dari penduduk Melayu akan mendiami bandar2 dan separuh Bandar.
Hampir 10 juta Melayu hidup dengan pendapatan RM1500 sebulan manakala 30% Melayu kaya menguasai 70% kekayaan orang Melayu. Jadi mana untung nya orang Melayu berada bawah pemerintahan UMNO?
Budak2 UMNO yang diupah oleh penasihat Najib untuk ptui sana ptui sini dalam blog ini- kita sengaja membenarkan komen mereka disiarkan supaya dunia boleh melihat inilah kualiti perkerja Najib.Kualiti ludahan dan kahak.
Masa depan UMNO semakin muram kerana punca sokongan nya akan berkurangan. Perpindahan rakyat kebandar disusuli dengan perbandaran minda mereka. Pengalaman dan perjalanan hidup yang lain yang mereka tempuhi tidak meletakkan UMNO itu sebagai punca segala nya. It’s a matter of time.
UMNO hanya hidup selagi orang Melayu mengucap solat ku, ibadah ku, hidupku dan matiku adalah kerana UMNO.
Anwar Ibrahim mengeluarkan kenyataan nya bukan untuk suka2 apatah lagi menghiburkan hati orang seperti KJ aau Mukhriz. Tapi jika saya faham Najib, Anwar Ibrahim membuat kenyataan tersebut tentulah sudah ada lampu hijau dari Najib.
Entah2 mereka sudah buat deal. Najib pun mahukan kerajaan perdamaian untuk mengukuhkan kedudukan masing2. Najib boleh tahu sesiapa yang menentang projek ini dan ramai mana mereka.
Setakat ini hanya KJ dan pimpinan second class sahaja yang bising dan sangsi. Pada suatu ketika dahulu yang sangsi dan tidak sangsi semua mencium kaki Anwar dan kalau boleh buntot Anwar pun mahu mereka cium.
Ramai orang lupa bahawa Najib dan Anwar digunting dari kain yang sama.Mana kita tahu ini semua bukan mainan politik Najib? Najib tahu Mahathir dan geng2 nya menyerang Najib dan akhirnya akan menyingkir Najib. Jadi, penyelesaian nya ialah membawa masuk Anwar dengan beberapa terma perdamaian untuk menghabiskan Mahathir dan pengikut Mahathir.
Masalah dengan Najib dan Anwar ialah kedua dua merasakan mereka lebih bijak dari yang lagi satu dan kedua dua merasakan mrereka boleh outwit satu sama lain. Hanya pak pandir sahaja yang bergegas masuk ketempat yang malaikat pun takut pergi.
KJ mesti lah faham maksud apabila Hishamudin berkata bahawa hanya Najib yang berhak bercakap mengenai tawaran Anwar tersebut. Najib belum berkata apa2, KJ sudah meluru kehadapan.
Apa kata jika langkah pertama Anwar ini adalah suatu rancangan to cut off Mahathir? Perdamaian antara Najib dan Anwar merupakan solution yang muktamad untuk menyingkirkan the Mahathir problem?
Dan perdamaian Anwar dengan Najib menutup lubang mana2 pihak menuntut kedudukan presiden UMNO dan PM? Jika orang lain jadi presiden UMNO, masa depan kedua dua Najib dan Anwar akan kelam.
Biarkan budak Najib dan Anwar ini bermain apa yang mereka mahu mainkan.- Mohd.Ariff Sabri bin Hj. Abdul Aziz@sakmongkol ak 47
Disebalik cadangan Anwar runding dengan BN
Anwar's national dialogue call timely...
To a government that won in the parliamentary sweepstakes but lost
out in the popular vote, the offer by the opposition leader of a
national dialogue to make headway against the country's daunting array
of problems must seem palatable.
The Najib Abdul Razak administration can no longer sustain the pretensc that its win in Election 2013 was authentic, so it has to reach out to the opposition.
Yesterday, Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim suggested that a national dialogue be held on the nation's state of affairs in which all political parties should take part.
He proposed this idea in his Merdeka Day commemorative speech, implying that he believed the dialogue would be an avenue out of the stalemate that presently prevails between an administration hamstrung by its lack of a credible mandate and an opposition sizeable enough to shout but not shift things.
Short, admittedly, of being stone cold certain that Prime Minister Najib had offered in the middle of June a deal to PKR to join BN in a unity government, we know that Najib does not think that the present status quo is healthy.
That is why Jusuf Kalla, the former Indonesian vice-president, was again pressed into service as intermediary between Najib and Anwar, after a failed mission by the Indonesian in Jakarta in mid-June.
A breathless Jusuf appeared in the wee hours one day towards the end of the fasting month at Anwar's residence in Bukit Segambut in another quest for the forging of a unity government between BN and PKR.
Jusuf had come bearing another offer from Najib to Anwar but again his mediation was unavailing because the opposition leader felt that the PM was only interested in breaking up the opposition Pakatan Rakyat by enticing one component to link up with his government, leaving the remnant to fend for itself.
To Pakatan supremo Anwar, this was a non-starter. The opposition leader had wasted no time in apprising his colleagues in the Pakatan leadership cohort of Jusuf's most recent mediation and its unacceptability, just as he did when the initial proffer was made in Jakarta in mid-June.
Of course, the Prime Minister's Office, in a statement, felt obliged to deny the whole thing, backed up by a denial by Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who was reputedly in secret negotiations with PKR secretary-general Saifuddin Nasution.
Not out of kilter
It was not just a question of there being no smoke without fire, the notion that well-connected persons from neighbouring countries do have the mediatory panache to broker breakthroughs in stalemated situations is not something unusual.
Malaysian emissaries have mediated between the Manila government and Islamic insurgents in Mindanao, so Jusuf Kalla's mediations are not something out of kilter.
His mission only served to underscore the perception in Asean capitals that the political situation in Malaysia is at a standoff between incumbent governors, BN, whose writ is ambiguous, and an opposition that can do little more than shout itself hoarse.
In other words, matters are at an impasse which would be tolerable if the national indices did not point to grave peril - from the threat of looming insolvency from annual deficits and consequent rising debt; from mounting crime rates caused marauding gangs faced with a dysfunctional police force; from a contagion of racial and religious issues; and from endemic corruption against a background of ineffective agencies set up to combat the scourge.
Against this backdrop, the call by the opposition leader for a national dialogue cannot be seen from the one-upmanship angle assumed by Khairy Jamaluddin, the Umno Youth leader, who deprecated it as indicative of a mood of desperation on the part of its proponent.
Contra Khairy, the desperation is more national than it is individual, so that in the face of a national psychosis, it would be frivolous to dismiss a call that savours of national salvation, not of personal expedience.
The time for political gamesmanship has passed, for partisan feint and maneouvre is over, because the array of problems the country is faced with is much too urgent for frivolous and partisan dismissal.
The time for disengagement with mere politics is nigh. The call for a national dialogue by the opposition leader is simply a proposition whose time has come.
There is a time for politics and there is a time for statesmanship. Now is the time for the latter.
Over to you, prime minister.-Terence Netto,Malaysiakini
The Najib Abdul Razak administration can no longer sustain the pretensc that its win in Election 2013 was authentic, so it has to reach out to the opposition.
Yesterday, Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim suggested that a national dialogue be held on the nation's state of affairs in which all political parties should take part.
He proposed this idea in his Merdeka Day commemorative speech, implying that he believed the dialogue would be an avenue out of the stalemate that presently prevails between an administration hamstrung by its lack of a credible mandate and an opposition sizeable enough to shout but not shift things.
Short, admittedly, of being stone cold certain that Prime Minister Najib had offered in the middle of June a deal to PKR to join BN in a unity government, we know that Najib does not think that the present status quo is healthy.
That is why Jusuf Kalla, the former Indonesian vice-president, was again pressed into service as intermediary between Najib and Anwar, after a failed mission by the Indonesian in Jakarta in mid-June.
A breathless Jusuf appeared in the wee hours one day towards the end of the fasting month at Anwar's residence in Bukit Segambut in another quest for the forging of a unity government between BN and PKR.
Jusuf had come bearing another offer from Najib to Anwar but again his mediation was unavailing because the opposition leader felt that the PM was only interested in breaking up the opposition Pakatan Rakyat by enticing one component to link up with his government, leaving the remnant to fend for itself.
To Pakatan supremo Anwar, this was a non-starter. The opposition leader had wasted no time in apprising his colleagues in the Pakatan leadership cohort of Jusuf's most recent mediation and its unacceptability, just as he did when the initial proffer was made in Jakarta in mid-June.
Of course, the Prime Minister's Office, in a statement, felt obliged to deny the whole thing, backed up by a denial by Home Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who was reputedly in secret negotiations with PKR secretary-general Saifuddin Nasution.
Not out of kilter
It was not just a question of there being no smoke without fire, the notion that well-connected persons from neighbouring countries do have the mediatory panache to broker breakthroughs in stalemated situations is not something unusual.
Malaysian emissaries have mediated between the Manila government and Islamic insurgents in Mindanao, so Jusuf Kalla's mediations are not something out of kilter.
His mission only served to underscore the perception in Asean capitals that the political situation in Malaysia is at a standoff between incumbent governors, BN, whose writ is ambiguous, and an opposition that can do little more than shout itself hoarse.
In other words, matters are at an impasse which would be tolerable if the national indices did not point to grave peril - from the threat of looming insolvency from annual deficits and consequent rising debt; from mounting crime rates caused marauding gangs faced with a dysfunctional police force; from a contagion of racial and religious issues; and from endemic corruption against a background of ineffective agencies set up to combat the scourge.
Against this backdrop, the call by the opposition leader for a national dialogue cannot be seen from the one-upmanship angle assumed by Khairy Jamaluddin, the Umno Youth leader, who deprecated it as indicative of a mood of desperation on the part of its proponent.
Contra Khairy, the desperation is more national than it is individual, so that in the face of a national psychosis, it would be frivolous to dismiss a call that savours of national salvation, not of personal expedience.
The time for political gamesmanship has passed, for partisan feint and maneouvre is over, because the array of problems the country is faced with is much too urgent for frivolous and partisan dismissal.
The time for disengagement with mere politics is nigh. The call for a national dialogue by the opposition leader is simply a proposition whose time has come.
There is a time for politics and there is a time for statesmanship. Now is the time for the latter.
Over to you, prime minister.-Terence Netto,Malaysiakini
UMNO leaders reach "collective decision" on Anwar's offer of a unity roundtable
cheers.
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