03 June 2015

Dia orang memang tak ikut arahan...

 

Gambar dua anggota polis bantuan merokok di zon larangan merokok tersebar di laman sosial semalam.

Gambar yang dimuat naik oleh laman Facebook Malaysia Velai Seivor Sangam telah mendapat 1,019 perkongsian selain dari dikritik netizen.

"Dia orang memang tak mahu ikut peraturan/undang-undang. Tetapi kita rakyat biasa diwajibkan pula ikut peraturan. Kalau tidak, kena saman," kata Sasikala Suriya Sasi Suriya yang jelas sekali berang dengan tindakan dua anggota berkenaan.

Meskipun ramai yang meluahkan rasa tidak puas hati, tampil segelintir individu yang menyelar 'keyboard warrior' agar jangan bersikap hipokrit.

"Jangan jadi hipokrit dan menunding jari terhadap orang lain. Polis juga adalah manusia yang tidak lari dari membuat kesilapan. Mungkin anda semua juga pernah merokok di tempat larangan mereka sama ada dalam sedar ataupun tidak," katanya individu berkenaan.

Sewajarnya, mana-mana pegawai beruniform haruslah memberikan contoh dan teladan yang baik kepada orang awam. Sungguhpun terlalu sangap nak merokok, carilah tempat yang bersesuaian.

Jangan kerana tindakan seperti ini, habis imej polis bantuan dan PDRM turut tercalar. Sudahlah masyarakat kita suka mencari kesalahan orang, nanti makin teruk pula jadinya. - thehypemedia

 
Rosmah--sarawak-report
 Sarawak Report dedah kehidupan mewah Rosmah...

Pereka fesyen dari Singapura, Natasha Mirpuri, dikatakan menjadi guru fesyen kepada Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor dan bertanggungjawab membimbing isteri Perdana Menteri dalam berfesyen.

Natasha, pemilik syarikat Khazanah Ciptaan yang memiliki butik ‘Mantra’ di Hotel Raffles, Singapura, juga dikatakan bertanggungjawab membuat bayaran rasmi bagi barangan kemas dan pakaian Rosmah, dakwa laporan eksklusif Sarawak Report.

Laporan itu mendakwa, sejak berkhidmat dengan Rosmah, Natasha semakin popular dan ‘makmur’.

“Pelanggan utama Natasha ialah Rosmah, di mana tugas Natasha ialah membereskan urusan jual beli berjuta-juta dolar barang kemas dan barangan mewah bagi Wanita Pertama Malaysia itu,” dakwa Sarawak Report.


Laporan itu turut mendakwa Rosmah lebih gemar membeli belah di luar negara berbanding dalam negara.

Natasha Mirpuri designs were featured at Islamic Fashion Festivals, where Rosmah was patron
Natasha Mirpuri

Sarawak Report yang memetik sumber dalaman mendakwa, koleksi pakaian Rosmah akan diterbangkan ke kediamannya jika beliau tidak berkesempatan membeli belah di luar negara.

Jenama-jenama yang menjadi pilihan Rosmah ialah seperti Roberto Cavalli dan Pucci (Italy), Joel (London) dan barangan kemas Jacob (New York), Lorenzo (Italy), Samir Halimeh (New York) dan Taher (Dubai).

Laporan itu juga mendakwa, Rosmah memiliki cita rasa tinggi terhadap barangan kemas khususnya batu permata.

Malah, laporan itu mendakwa, bunga pahar untuk majlis perkahwinan anak perempuannya baru-baru ini menggunakan batu permata sebenar.

“Apabila memilih batu permata, Rosmah tidak pernah menggunakan batu tiruan.

Apabila ia mengenai kecantikan, ya, dia menyuntik Botox sebulan sekali ,” dakwa Sarawak Report.- fmt


What Malaysia needs is a Malay ‘Lee Kuan Yew...

Lawyer Datuk Zaid Ibrahim has been in active politics for 12 years, but that does not qualify him as a veteran by any standard. On the other hand, few could have done as much as he did in those years – he has worked with the government, even becoming a Cabinet minister and then crossed the political divide to fight with the opposition. He even set up his own party.

In that time, he has also earned himself the title of the minister who has served the shortest term in Malaysian history. He was Minister in the Prime Min­ister’s Department from March 18 to Sept 17, 2008 – a mere six months.

He retired from active politics two years ago, but continues to give his views on current issues, particularly on the political situation in the country through statements, his blog, jottings and comments.

In a recent interview with Focusweek at his home in Tropicana, Petaling Jaya, Zaid speaks candidly about how Malaysia, despite being poorer “back then”, was a happier nation, and how the country can move forward not by changing politicians but by strengthening its institutions.


Zaid says things were different then.

“It is terrible today, (the way) the government regulates everything. It is all very silly. Those days, the government didn’t get involved in your personal life. If you wanted to go and buy 4-digit (lottery) or if Muslims wanted to eat at certain places or wear a dress to go dancing (it was okay),” he says cheekily.

Zaid admits that he was never keen on politics. While he was in Kota Bharu prior to becoming a lawyer, he was active in social and charity work.

“Through social work, one gets in­volved with the public and that was how I got dragged into politics. I was a late bloomer… I only took up politics when I was in my 40s,” he says.

Zaid joined Umno in 1988 and only be­came Umno division leader in Kota Bharu in 2000. He then contested in the 2004 elections and won the Kota Bharu parlia­mentary seat. However, he did not get to defend his seat in the following general election in 2008.

That was the year of the “political tsunami” that cost Barisan Nasional its two-thirds majority in Parliament. Zaid was appointed senator and Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department in charge of legal matters. (He subsequently resigned from his law firm Zaid Ibrahim & Co.)

Known for his criticisms against the government’s handling of legal issues, the then Prime Minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, appointed him to “reform the legal system and the judiciary”.

It was during his tenure as minister that the government “openly apologised” for its handling of the 1988 judicial crisis which saw the sacking of the then Chief Justice Tun Salleh Abas after he was found guilty of misconduct.

Indeed, Zaid did seem like he was on the right track to reform the judiciary, and even criticised the use of the Internal Security Act to arrest DAP’s Teresa Kok (Seputeh MP), blogger Raja Petra Kamaruddin and journalist Tan Hoon Cheng in September 2008.

In his book titled I, Too, Am Malay, he wrote: “It was an abuse of power that was unacceptable. I was embarrassed publicly because I was (then) the minister responsible for law. I was not informed of the decision to arrest them.

“A ministerial post is something to be proud of. We can embrace and stay in the post if we can bring benefit to the nation. But if the post does not allow us to serve well, with transparency and dignity, and if government action conflicts with legal principles as well as assaults the principles of humanity, we have to resign. To me, the arrest of the three members of the public did not allow me to remain as minister.”

So after five months and 27 days into the job, Zaid submitted his resignation. By December that year, he was sacked from Umno. Six months later, this former min­ister, which The Economist once described as the “most promising” appointment in the 2008 Cabinet reshuffle, announced that he was joining the opposition.



Zaid says he had already expected the current problems among the PKR, PAS and DAP even when he was there.

“I saw this coming. They don’t have a common platform. I was the one who started the common platform for them, I was the one who initiated it… but a lot of things were not agreed to at the same time.

“All this is just wayang. They are not serious. But I lacked the ability to unite them. By then, I wanted to form a real party and not just three parties coming as one,” he says, adding that he then left PKR and formed his own party, Kita (People’s Welfare Party).

But two years later, he announced that he was resigning as president of Kita.

Zaid, who has been critical of the govern­ment, says Malaysia is in “terrible shape”.

Referring to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, he says: “Everybody has his good and bad points. Nobody is perfect.

“He may be the best person at heart or with the best intentions, we don’t know. The people need a leader who leads and say this is right and wrong. He must speak up and be visible.”

Zaid says while it is important to have qual­ity leaders, what was more critical was to have strong and independent institutions.

“These are our civil service, courts, the police, Parliament. For the country to be stable and prosperous, the institutions must be solid and strong. You cannot control the quality of leaders,” he says.

“The problem with our country is the institutions become submerged. They put themselves under the control of the politi­cians. If the institutions were strong, things like 1MDB would not have happened because politicians and ministers know that they (institutions) cannot be pushed around.”

He says one way of changing this is to have a strong leader.




“The last strong leader was Mahathir (Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad), but he didn’t change anything, in fact he destroyed some of it.

“I have always said we needed a Malay version of Lee Kuan Yew. Someone who says this is the way we have to do this. But for now, we don’t have a strong leader and that is where our problem lies.”

He adds that the Malays, particularly, feel insecure under the opposition.

“That is always the mantra, but is that really so? Because if the Malays are insecure, it only means they haven’t heard enough from the opposition. The Malays can think too, I am sure. But they are only listening to one side. So the question is (as) always, how do you get to them?

“PAS, as a Malay political party, doesn’t talk about these things. It only talks about God. That is why the Malays don’t under­stand anything else. If PAS had been more progressive by speaking about social issues and justice, about why we need a strong institution and policies, then the Malays would understand there is an alternative,” he says.

“But for the last 20 to 30 years, all it has been talking is going to heaven and hell. So it is not surprising that the Malays feel comfortable with Umno.” - Rita Jong.theantdaily


Malaysia perlukan ‘Lee Kuan Yew’ Melayu

Sapa PM sebenaqnya...

Story kat SINI dan SINI  

8.30 pm - LIVE DI SINI


cheers.

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