Jumaat, 26 September 2014

Anwar Ibrahim

Anwar Ibrahim


Malaysia sedition crackdown denounced

Posted: 26 Sep 2014 03:34 AM PDT

Al Jazeera

Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim is the latest figure to be caught in the government’s widening sedition crackdown, in what one human rights group called “blatantly politically motivated”.

Anwar will be questioned by police on Friday, and his lawyers expect him to be charged with sedition. He is the highest-profile figure to be investigated for “seditious acts”. Lawyers say it relates to a speech he gave at a political rally three years ago, to mark the launch of a campaign relating to the 2006 murder of a Mongolian model, who was alleged to have had close links to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Fellow opposition MP Lim Kit Siang described the investigation as “the worst form of political vendetta and gross abuse of power”.

At least 25 cases are now going through the courts, according to Lawyers for Liberty, a legal NGO. Among those charged is Anwar’s own lawyer and opposition MP N Surendran.

If found guilty, all could be jailed for three years and banned from public office for five years after that.

Some have already been convicted. On September 19, student activist Adam Adli was given a 12-month sentence for remarks he made calling for the ruling coalition and its largest party, the UMNO, to be toppled.

Wan Saiful Wan Jan of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEAS) think-tank said he has begun to rein in what he says publicly. “It’s about making sure people remain compliant, don’t rebel too much, don’t talk too much, don’t criticise too much, and remain fearful to speak out,” he said.

‘Silencing the opposition’

N Surendran told Al Jazeera the crackdown reflects the government’s insecurity about its position in Malaysia, saying the arrests were designed to “silence the opposition and civil society”.

“In our entire history, the sedition act has never been used in this way before,” he said.

Many Malaysian news publications have portrayed the three elements considered most important in Malay society – race, religion and royalty – as being under threat.

This theme of a “threat” to Malay existence alleged by the government is an old one, but has come to the forefront since last year’s general election, in which the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition failed to win more than 50 percent of the popular vote, and returned to power with its smallest-ever majority of seats in parliament.

The result was even worse than in the 2008 election, when Barisan Nasional coalition government lost its crucial two-thirds majority, which had allowed it to make constitutional changes at will.

Lawyer Ambiga Sreenevasan said there is an atmosphere of insecurity – but among the dominant United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) party, not the Malaysian people.

“It’s all about power. It’s about people who think they’re losing power. It’s about shoring up their power base. There’s no threat. How is the majority under threat? If you look at the figures, the administration, police, the army are mostly Malay. It’s not Malays under threat, it’s UMNO,” Sreenevasan said.

London-based rights group Amnesty International called on the government to repeal the sedition law.

“There has been a disturbing increase in the use of the Sedition Act over the past few months against individuals who have done nothing but peacefully express their opinions,” said Amnesty’s Rupert Abbott. “This crackdown is creating a climate of fear in Malaysia and must end.”

A request for comment from the Malaysian government was not answered by the time of publication.

Former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has defended the Sedition Act, arguing if it were abolished, “the extremists would be free to criticise the king and monarchy openly and even demand that the royal institution be dismantled. There is no law that can stop them”.

Identity politics

The crackdown is just as much about identity as about power, said Syahredzan Johan, the chairman of the Bar Council’s National Young Lawyers Committee.

One-third of Malaysians are under the age of 15, and this tech-savvy generation communicating through social media may be crossing cultural boundaries and coming together in ways the country’s much publicised “One Malaysia” policy has failed to achieve.

“Malaysians are grappling with how to move forward. For the longest time they have been boxed into these neat little categories of Malay, Chinese, Indian – and slowly, through social media, these categories are being broken down. Malaysians are seeing each other through more than just their ethnic identities; they’re seeing each other in the same light and seeing that they are not that different after all,” Syahredzan said.

The idea of social cohesion among younger Malaysians is unsettling the ruling party and a constitution formed on the basis of Malay supremacy, according to Syahredzan.

“This idea that maybe we’re not that different is a threat to the status quo. The sedition crackdown is because right-wing groups have put pressure on the government to take action against these groups which they see as threatening the status quo – the status quo being these [ethnic] categories, and also the status quo of not touching race, religion, or royalty,” he said.

Prime Minister Razak is trying to reform his party and appeal to younger voters with Facebook and Twitter accounts. But at the same time, he is under severe pressure from within the UMNO rank-and-file and right-wing Muslim groups such as Perkasa and ISMA.

‘The good old days’

Eric Paulsen from Lawyers for Liberty said with the growth of social media, Malaysians are becoming more outspoken online.

“It’s not like the good old days, when there was full control over the press. But among the right-wing and Malay rights groups, there’s distrust around non-Malay and non-Muslim groups. If they feel their honour, race, or religion have been slighted they must react,” said Paulsen.

But observers say with state-controlled media outlets pumping out messages about how ethnic Chinese will take over the country, and how groups are trying to convert it to Christianity, even urban, educated Malaysians are starting to believe the “danger”.

“It’s an imagined threat,” said Paulsen.

In 2012, Prime Minister Razak abandoned Malaysia’s controversial Internal Security Act in 2012. That meant authorities lost the power to detain without charge opponents whom they believed were a threat. As a result, the government appears to have resorted to the next best thing – the Sedition Act.

This could explain the government’s reluctance to repeal the act. But even multiple arrests for sedition and the ensuing court hearings have their limits. “How many prosecutions can they do?” asked Paulsen.

It’s not clear how the conflict between conservative and progressive elements in Malaysia will eventually play out.

Some see a bleak future for Malaysia if the current crackdown continues. Former law minister Zaid Ibrahim said he even suspects there could be a time in the future when Malaysia succumbs to military rule if UMNO’s dominance is overturned.

About the only thing that is not in doubt is that Malaysia is at a crossroads.

Political Islam and Post-Islamism Era

Posted: 25 Sep 2014 08:50 PM PDT

Abim.org

The debate on the term of Islamic state will constantly reappear in the political discourse in country that Islamic Party exists. It used to be a phenomenon during the post colonialism era when the Egyptian Islamic scholars (Muslim Brotherhood) were driven to bring back the institution of Islamic Caliphate. In 2009, I happened to write an essay entitled "Searching New Substance of Islamic Movement of the First Post Islamic Rise" in which I set out to discuss the articulation of remarkable social trends, political perspectives, and religious thought in Malaysia following the extension of Islamism era in 1960s-1970s from Muslim Brotherhood.

I had outlined some main points the Islamic revival in the year of 1970s. Among the major treasures including scattering of Islamic heritage, especially knowledge of materials and guidelines in solving the current problems and challenges, and the deep confidence of Islam as a potential solution to all diseases and healing of individuals and society. The Phenomena that occur during the era of 70's is often referred to historians as the era of Islamic Revivalism Rise / Islamic Resurgence.

According to Gordon P. Means in his book Political Islam in South East Asia, "the persistence of some Islamic movement like Muslim Youth Movement of Malaysia (ABIM) and Dar Al-Arqam in united the energy of da’wah finally yielded success a lucrative generation today. The Islamism era in which the Muslim Brotherhood’s dominance of global Islamist activism perceived by orientalist as a big failure.

Apart from due to undemocratic dictators who inhumanely persecuted Islamist, Esposito and Oliver Roy articulated the problem of vast majority of them when the Islamic Revivalism (Islah & Tajdid) was dragged into political Islam without preparation of complete blue print of the good governance as alternative to the so called secular state. The failure of Political Islam?

In a book "The Failure of Political Islam", Roy shows that the recruitment of large numbers of alienated young men without much hope in the future has transformed political Islam into what he calls “neo-fundamentalism.” Unlike the actual Islamists, many of whom were serious intellectuals who tried to adapt to aspects of modernity, the neo-fundamentalists do little more than channel the discontents of urban youth into political opposition. Neo-fundamentalists worry about morals, mixed education, veiling, and the corrupting influence of the West, but they have no real political or economic program.

If they come to power they will resemble the repressive, one-party regimes that they are likely to replace, and will in turn face the opposition of these same disaffected classes. The evidence to date, however, from Iran and Sudan supports his view that Islamists in power are far from finding solutions to the social and economic problems of their peoples. Roy sees contemporary Islamic movements not as serious efforts to return to the classical paradigms of Islamic governance, but rather as a result of a failed modernization.

The poor ethics and attitude of the Islamists who run the politics contributed to the failure of political Islam. Implementation of Syariah for example, it is perceived as embarassing when the essential objectives of Islamic Law (Maqasid Syariah) to achieve justice is obstructed by the double standard and selective prosecution policies practiced by the official in the "Islamic state".

The late 1990s and early 2000 the trends had primarily shifted in stages when the Islamists no longer articulate the term Islamic Revivalism or Islamic state as the main idea of their movement but rather to conceptualize and strategize the rationale of transcending Islamism in social, political, and intellectual domains. Asef Bayat considered the transformation of this societal trend as "post-Islamism".

Islamist becomes aware of their system's inadequacies as they attempt to normalize and institutionalize their rule. The continuous trial and error makes the system susceptible to questions and criticisms. Islamism becomes compelled, by societal pressure to re-invent itself and the tremendous transformation in religious and political discourse by En-Nahda movement in Tunisia and AK – Justice and Development Party in Turkey exemplifies this tendency.

Rashid al-Ghannushi and Erdogan decided to follow the system which the mainstream familiar without irrationally imposed the Islamic rules or terms to alternate the policy. En-Nahda and Turkey post-Islamism were embodied in remarkable social trends – expressed in religiously innovative discourse by youths, students, women, and religious intellectuals, who called for democracy, individual rights, tolerance, and gender equality.

The advent of post-Islamism does not necessarily mean the historical end of Islamism but it means the birth out of discourse and politics. It is an attempt to turn the underlying principles of Islamism by emphasizing rights instead of duties, plurality in place of singular authoritative voice, historicity rather than fixed scriptures, and the future instead of the past.

Falling into Islamism net A paradox is how still certain of the Islamists, used to be more creative when under pressure, tend to loss perspective or fighting among themselves when confronted with a situation that is somewhat deals with the notion of liberalism, moderation, openness and equal rights.

Perhaps, the idea of some cleric-Islamist who fails to aware the tremendous change in the era of Post Islamism resulted in the movement to fall into Islamism net. They proudly subscribe the idea of rigidity, claim others who denounce their leadership as un-Islamic, bring the idea of Islamic Revivalism at the most extreme line, and often articulate the terms of Islamic state/rules without providing a tangible blue print as alternative to the society.

The scenario eventually recruits the young people to be irrational and perceive Islam as religion that cannot compromise at all with the individual choice and freedom, democracy and modernity in order to achieve what some have termed an "alternative modernity". Worse still, this failure to appreciate the change of global trend indeed have reversed them back to the era of extremist Jihadist believing extremism as the only solution for Islam rather than mercy and compassion.

The extremist Jihadis around the world highlighted by media for instance indeed rooted from this failure. Perhaps, the prevalent perception among them is that idea of post-Islamism is an attempt to extremely dilute the Islamic principles. Post-Islamism is neither anti-Islamic, nor is it secular. Rather, it represents an endeavour to fuse religiosity and rights, faith and freedom, Islam and liberty.

PREPARED BY: MUHAMMAD FAISAL BIN ABDUL AZIZ SECRETARY GENERAL MUSLIM YOUTH MOVEMENT MALAYSIA (ABIM)

PARTI KEADILAN RAKYAT NEGERI SEMBILAN

PARTI KEADILAN RAKYAT NEGERI SEMBILAN


Profil Menteri Besar Selangor Ke-15

Posted: 26 Sep 2014 12:59 AM PDT


Azmin umum 10 Exco baharu Selangor, 3 muka baru

Posted: 26 Sep 2014 12:34 AM PDT


SHAH ALAM 26 SEPT: Menteri Besar Selangor, Mohamed Azmin Ali hari ini mengumumkan 10 Ahli Majlis Mesyuarat Kerajaan Negeri (exco)
yang baharu, masing-masing 4 dari KEADILAN, 3 PAS dan 3 DAP.

Dengan pengumuman ini, bermakna, kuota empat kerusi yang diperuntukkan kepada PAS sebelum ini dikurangkan satu.
Exco sebelum ini, Sallehen Mukhyi dan Dr Halimah Ali tidak dilantik semula dan mereka digantikan dengan muka baru, Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (Adun) Taman Templer, Mohd Zaidy Abdul Talib.
Mereka yang dikekalkan adalah, Iskandar Samad dan Dr Ahmad Yunus Hairi.
IMG_8789
Bagi kerusi KEADILAN pula, Elizabeth Wong dan Dr Daroyah Alwi dikekalkan sementara dua muka baru yang dilantik adalah Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad dan Amiruddin Shari.

Manakala tiga Exco DAP dikekalkan dan mereka adalah Teng Chang Kim, Ean Yong Hian Wah dan Ganabatirau Veraman.
"Saya telah meneliti dan mengambil kira semua pandangan pimpinan Pakatan Rakyat berhubung pelantikan Ahli-ahli Majlis Mesyuarat Negeri Selangor.
"Perbincangan tersebut tertumpu kepada usaha untuk membentuk barisan Exco yang kuat, padu dan cekap untuk terus maju ke hadapan membangunkan Selangor," katanya pada sidang media pengumuman tersebut di pejabat Setiausaha Kerajaan Negeri (SUK), pagi ini.
Menurut Azmin, lantikan baru ini telah mendapat perkenan Sultan Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah berkuatkuasa 26 September.
"Saya telah mengadap Sultan pada 25 September lalu untuk berbincang dan mendapat perkenan duli Tuanku bagi perlantikan Ahli-Ahli Majlis Mesyuarat Kerajaan Negeri yang baru selaras dengan Perkara L3(2)(B) Undang-undang Tubuh Kerajaan Selangor 1959.
Jelas Azmin lagi, istiadat lantikan baru Exco akan dilangsungkan di Istana Alam Shah, Klang jam 3 petang ini namun beliau tidak memaklumkan porfolio bagi kesemua Exco yang dilantik.
"Porfolio bagi Exco baru akan dibincangkan kemudian," ujar beliau.
Short URL: http://www.keadilandaily.com/?p=63135

Khamis, 25 September 2014

Anwar Ibrahim

Anwar Ibrahim


Who’s paying the pro-war pundits?

Posted: 25 Sep 2014 12:48 AM PDT

The Nation

If you read enough news and watch enough cable television about the threat of the Islamic State, the radical Sunni Muslim militia group better known simply as IS, you will inevitably encounter a parade of retired generals demanding an increased US military presence in the region. They will say that our government should deploy, as retired General Anthony Zinni demanded, up to 10,000 American boots on the ground to battle IS. Or as in retired General Jack Keane’s case, they will make more vague demands, such as for “offensive” air strikes and the deployment of more military advisers to the region.

But what you won’t learn from media coverage of IS is that many of these former Pentagon officials have skin in the game as paid directors and advisers to some of the largest military contractors in the world. Ramping up America’s military presence in Iraq and directly entering the war in Syria, along with greater military spending more broadly, is a debatable solution to a complex political and sectarian conflict. But those goals do unquestionably benefit one player in this saga: America’s defense industry.

Keane is a great example of this phenomenon. His think tank, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), which he oversees along with neoconservative partisans Liz Cheney and William Kristol, has provided the data on IS used for multiple stories by The New York Times, the BBC and other leading outlets.

Keane has appeared on Fox News at least nine times over the last two months to promote the idea that the best way to stop IS is through military action—in particular, through air strikes deep into IS-held territory. In one of the only congressional hearings about IS over the summer, Keane was there to testify and call for more American military engagement. On Wednesday evening, Keane declared President Obama’s speech on defeating IS insufficient, arguing that a bolder strategy is necessary. “I truly believe we need to put special operation forces in there,” he told host Megyn Kelly.

Left unsaid during his media appearances (and left unmentioned on his congressional witness disclosure form) are Keane’s other gigs: as special adviser to Academi, the contractor formerly known as Blackwater; as a board member to tank and aircraft manufacturer General Dynamics; a “venture partner” to SCP Partners, an investment firm that partners with defense contractors, including XVionics, an “operations management decision support system” company used in Air Force drone training; and as president of his own consulting firm, GSI LLC.

To portray Keane as simply a think tank leader and a former military official, as the media have done, obscures a fairly lucrative career in the contracting world. For the General Dynamics role alone, Keane has been paid a six-figure salary in cash and stock options since he joined the firm in 2004; last year, General Dynamics paid him $258,006.

Keane did not immediately return a call requesting comment for this article.

Disclosure would also help the public weigh Keane’s policy advocacy. For instance, in his August 24 opinion column for The Wall Street Journal, in which he was bylined only as a retired general and the chairman of ISW, Keane wrote that “the time has come to confront the government of Qatar, which funds and arms IS and other Islamist terrorist groups such as Hamas.” While media reports have linked fundraisers for IS with individuals operating in Qatar (though not the government), the same could be said about Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, where many of the major donors of IS reportedly reside. Why did Keane single out Qatar and ignore Saudi Arabia and Kuwait? Is it because his company, Academi, has been a major business partner to the United Arab Emirates, Qatar’s primary rival in the region?

Other examples abound.

In a Washington Post story about Obama’s decision not to deploy troops to combat IS, retired Marine General James Mattis was quoted as a skeptic. “The American people will once again see us in a war that doesn’t seem to be making progress,” Mattis told the paper. Left unmentioned was Mattis’s new role as Keane’s colleague on the General Dynamics corporate board, a role that afforded Mattis $88,479 in cash and stock options in 2013.

Retired General Anthony Zinni, perhaps the loudest advocate of a large deployment of American soliders into the region to fight IS, is a board member to BAE Systems’ US subsidiary, and also works for several military-focused private equity firms.

CNN pundit Frances Townsend, a former Bush administration official, has recently appeared on television calling for more military engagement against IS. As the Public Accountability Initiative, a nonprofit that studies elite power structures, reported, Townsend “holds positions in two investment firms with defense company holdings, MacAndrews & Forbes and Monument Capital Group, and serves as an advisor to defense contractor Decision Sciences.”

“Mainstream news outlets have a polite practice of identifying former generals and former congressmembers as simply 'formers’—neglecting to inform the public of what these individuals are doing now, which is often quite pertinent information, like that they are corporate lobbyists or board members,” says Jeff Cohen, an associate professor of journalism at Ithaca College.

Media outlets might justify their omissions by reasoning that these pundits have merely advocated certain military strategies, not specific weapons systems, so disclosure of their financial stake in the policy need not be made. Yet the drumbeat for war has already spiraled into calls for increased military spending that lifts all boats—or non-operational jets for that matter.

When the Pentagon sent a recent $2 billion request for ramped-up operations in the Middle East, supposedly to confront the IS issue, budget details obtained by Bloomberg News revealed that officials asked for money for additional F-35 planes. The F-35 is not in operation and would not be used against IS. The plane is notoriously over budget and perpetually delayed—some experts call it the most expensive weapon system in human history—with a price tag now projected to be over $1 trillion. In July, an engine fire grounded the F-35 fleet and again delayed the planned debut of the plane. How it ended up in the Pentagon’s Middle East wish list is unclear.

“I think an inclination to use military action a lot is something the defense industry subscribes to because it helps to perpetuate an overall climate of permissiveness towards military spending,” says Ed Wasserman, dean of the UC Berkeley Graduate School for Journalism. Wasserman says that the media debate around IS has tilted towards more hawkish former military leaders, and that the public would be best served not only with better disclosure but also a more balanced set of opinions that would include how expanded air strikes could cause collateral civil casualties. “The past fifty years has a lot of evidence of the ineffectiveness of air power when it comes to dealing with a more nimble guerrilla-type adversary, and I’m not hearing this conversation,” he notes.

The pro-war punditry of retired generals has been the subject of controversy in the past. In a much-cited 2008 exposé, The New York Times revealed a network of retired generals on the payroll of defense contractors who carefully echoed the Bush administration’s Iraq war demands through appearances on cable television.

The paper’s coverage of the run-up to a renewed conflict in the region today has been notably measured, including many voices skeptical of calls for a more muscular military response to IS. Nonetheless, the Times has relied on research from a contractor-funded advocacy organization as part of its IS coverage. Reports produced by Keane’s ISW have been used to support six different infographics used for Times stories since June. The Times has not mentioned Keane’s potential conflict of interest or that ISW may have a vested stake in its policy positions. The Public Accountability Initiative notes that ISW’s corporate sponsors represent “a who’s who of the defense industry and includes Raytheon, SAIC, Palantir, General Dynamics, CACI, Northrop Grumman, DynCorp, and L-3 Communication.” As the business network CNBC reported this week, Raytheon in particular has much to gain from escalation in Iraq, as the company produces many of the missiles and radar equipment used in airstrikes.

In addition to providing reports and quotes for the media, ISW leaders have demanded a greater reaction to IS from the Obama administration. In The Weekly Standard this week, ISW president Kim Kagan wrote that President Obama’s call for a limited engagement against IS “has no chance of success.”

ISW’s willingness to push the envelope has gotten the organization into hot water before. In 2013, ISW suffered an embarrassing spectacle when one of its analysts, Elizabeth O’Bagy, was found to have inflated her academic credentials, touting a PhD from a Georgetown program that she had never entered.

But memories are short, and the media outlets now relying heavily on ISW research have done little to scrutinize the think tank’s policy goals. Over the last two years, ISW, including O’Bagy, were forcefully leading the push to equip Syrian rebels with advanced anti-tank and anti-aircraft weaponry to defeat Bashar al-Assad.

For Keane, providing arms to Syrian rebels, even anti-American groups, was a worthwhile gamble. In an interview with Fox Business Network in May of last year, Keane acknowledged that arming Syrian rebels might mean “weapons can fall into radical Islamists’ hands.” He continued, “It is true the radical Islamists have gained in power and influence mainly because we haven’t been involved and that is a fact, but it’s still true we have vetted some of these moderate rebel groups with the CIA, and I’m convinced we can—it’s still acceptable to take that risk, and let’s get on with changing momentum in the war.”
That acceptable risk Keane outlined has come to fruition. Recent reports now indicate that US-made weapons sent from American allies in the region to Syrian rebels have fallen into the hands of IS.

Keane, and ISW, is undeterred. The group just put out a call for 25,000 ground troops in Iraq and Syria.

[KENYATAAN MEDIA] Pendakwaan Akta Hasutan Terhadap Peguambela Saya Mengalang Pendengaran Yang Adil di Mahkamah Persekutuan

Posted: 24 Sep 2014 09:41 PM PDT

KENYATAAN MEDIA
UNTUK EDARAN SEGERA
25 SEPT 2014

PENDAKWAAN AKTA HASUTAN TERHADAP PEGUAMBELA SAYA OLEH PENTADBIRAN NAJIB RAZAK MENGHALANG PENDENGARAN YANG ADIL DI MAHKAMAH PERSEKUTUAN

Saya rujuk rayuan saya terhadap sabitan kes Fitnah 2 yang akan didengar Mahkamah Persekutuan pada 28 dan 29 Oktober 2014.

Perkembangan mutakhir cukup menjejas hak saya untuk mendapatkan pendengaran yang adil di dalam rayuan yang akan datang ini. Pada 19 dan 28 Ogos 2014, peguambela saya N Surendran telah didakwa dua kali di bawah Akta Hasutan, dan kedua-dua dakwaan ini berkait langsung dengan kes rayuan saya ini.

Kedua-dua dakwaan tersebut melibatkan perkara-perkara yang dibangkitkan beliau yang merupakan sebahagian daripada pembelaan saya di dalam rayuan di peringkat Mahkamah Persekutuan ini. Dakwaan pertama berkait kritikan terhadap keputusan hakim Mahkamah Rayuan yang mensabitkan saya. Kritikan ini melibatkan hujah-hujah yang akan dibangkit peguambela saya di dalam rayuan yang akan datang ini.

Dakwaan kedua berkait kenyataan Surendran yang telah bercakap kepada media selepas pengurusan kes rayuan saya bahawa wujud satu konspirasi dalam dakwaan-dakwaan terhadap saya. Sekali lagi saya nyatakan bahawa dakwaan konspirasi adalah salah satu hujah pembelaan saya di mahkamah.

Di dalam kenyataan dari kandang tertuduh, sewaktu perbicaraan kes saya telah menyatakan:

"Keseluruhan proses ini tidak lain dan tidak bukan adalah satu konspirasi oleh Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak untuk menghilangkan saya dari persada politik dengan sekali lagi berusaha untuk memenjarakan saya. Oleh itu saya nyatakan bahawa saya tidak mempunyai kepercayaan bahawa keadilan akan ditegakkan dalam perbicaraan ini walaupun pasukan pembelaan telah berusaha bersungguh-sungguh. Sepertimana yang saya sebutkan sebelum ini, ini bukanlah satu perbicaraan jenayah. Ini adalah satu sandiwara yang dipentaskan pemerintah untuk memastikan saya tidak aktif dalam politik demi kelangsungan kekuasaan mereka.

Pada 1998, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad telah melakukan perkara ini dan tindakan 'Machiavellian' beliau menggunakan seluruh jentera Kerajaan telah memastikan saya dipenjarakan selama 15 tahun di atas kesalahan-kesalahan yang tidak pernah saya lakukan. Inilah kezaliman dan ketidakadilan yang telah diperlakukan terhadap saya dahulu. Dan inilah juga kezaliman dan ketidakadilan yang diteruskan hari ini.

Najib Razak melakukan perkara yang sama seperti mentornya, iaitu dengan mengerahkan keseluruhan jentera termasuk media, polis, Peguam Negara dan badan kehakiman untuk memastikan keadilan tidak ditegakkan dan saya dibuang dari persada politik tanah air."

Kenapakah ia satu kesalahan jenayah untuk peguambela saya menyatakan hujah pembelaan saya?

Kenyataan-kenyataan peguam saya untuk membela saya kini dijadikan asas pendakwaan jenayah terhadap beliau. Ini satu penganiayaan. Ia jelas dilakukan untuk menakut-nakutkan pasukan pembelaan saya dan menghalang mereka dari melakukan tugas-tugas profesional serta mencabul hak saya dibawah perlembagaan untuk mendapat khidmat guaman yang baik.

Rayuan saya akan terjejas dan akan bersifat tidak adil dari saat ia dimulakan. Pendakwaan-pendakwaan terhadap Surendran ini hanya mengesahkan dakwaan konspirasi terhadap saya dan mengukuhkan kepercayaan bahawa pihak kerajaan berusaha sedaya upaya untuk memenjarakan saya.

ANWAR IBRAHIM

Rabu, 24 September 2014

Anwar Ibrahim

Anwar Ibrahim


[VIDEO] Agihan kerusi exco bidang kuasa MB, kata Anwar

Posted: 24 Sep 2014 02:27 AM PDT

Malaysia: Sedition investigation into opposition leader politically motivated

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 08:17 PM PDT

Amnesty International

The Malaysian authorities' sedition investigation into opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim is blatantly politically motivated and the latest move in a widespread crackdown on dissent using the colonial-era Sedition Act, Amnesty International said today.

Police in Malaysia this morning announced that they are re-opening a sedition investigation relating to  a speech given by Anwar Ibrahim, criticizing the government, made during a political rally in March 2011. He will be questioned by police on Friday 26 September 2014 and is, according to one of his lawyers, likely to be charged under the Sedition Act.

"This case is clearly political and smacks of persecution – the investigation should be dropped immediately. Anwar Ibrahim has been a favourite target of the authorities for more than a decade, and this appears to be the latest attempt to silence and harass a critical voice," said Rupert Abbott, Amnesty International's Deputy Asia-Pacific Director.

Over the past months, Malaysian authorities have intensified their use of the Sedition Act, a colonial-era law that criminalizes criticism of the government, to target peaceful dissidents.

Two student activists have been sentenced under the Sedition Act in recent weeks. On 19 September, Adam Adli was sentenced to one year in prison, while Safwan Anang was sentenced to 10 months’ imprisonment on 5 September. In February, prominent human rights lawyer Karpal Singh was also found guilty of sedition. He passed away in a road traffic accident pending an appeal against his conviction.

At least 15 individuals – including activists, opposition politicians, journalists, students and academics – are currently facing charges under the Sedition Act and could face fines or imprisonment. Anwar Ibrahim's lawyer, Padang Serai MP N Surendran, is among those facing charges.

"The Sedition Act is an outdated and repressive piece of legislation that the authorities are using to target anyone who speaks out against those in power. It must be repealed immediately," said Rupert Abbott.

"There has been a disturbing increase in the use of the Sedition Act over the past few months against individuals who have done nothing but peacefully express their opinions. This crackdown is creating a climate of fear in Malaysia and must end."

In 2012, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak publically committed to repealing the draconian law stating that it represented "a bygone era", but two years later his promise remains unfulfilled.

Additional information

Amnesty International has long expressed concerns about the 1948 Sedition Act. The law criminalizes a wide array of acts, including those "with a tendency to excite disaffection against any Ruler or government" or to "question any matter" protected by Malaysia's Constitution. Those found guilty can face three years in jail, be fined up to MYR 5,000 (approximately USD 1,570) or both. It does not comply with international human rights law, and violates the right to freedom of expression, which is enshrined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), and also guaranteed in Article 10 of the Constitution.

N37 Batu Maung

N37 Batu Maung


Kursus Pengurusan Sembelihan Perdana & Forum Perdana

Posted: 24 Sep 2014 03:35 AM PDT

Selasa, 23 September 2014

Anwar Ibrahim

Anwar Ibrahim


What Westminster system discretion means

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 10:29 PM PDT

Malaysiakini

Given what has happened in Selangor, it is perhaps instructive for us to go through the law and practice that regulate the appointment of, as well as the change in, a government.

Both the federal and state levels of government in Malaysia practice the Westminster mode of governance. As some of the states in the federation do not have hereditary monarchs, we actually have some little republics – namely Malacca, Penang, Sabah and Sarawak – within the same system.

Such is indeed an interesting subject for study. That, notwithstanding the powers given to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the rulers and the Yang di-Pertua Negeri, when it comes to appointing government, are actually the same.

For one thing such power is a creation of the Federal Constitution. Unlike the power pertaining to religion, for example. It is of course found in the constitution, but its origin is not from the Westminster convention.

As far as the power to appoint the government is concerned, it is the Westminster convention and practice that stand as the benchmark.

Indeed, this was the formula left behind by the Reid Commission. Such is also the case with the so-called discretion to dissolve the House. What is crucial here is that these powers should not be understood literally, unlike the notion of discretion in ordinary legislation. It goes without saying that the concept of discretion in the constitutional sense is quite different.

To argue otherwise would virtually render elections unnecessary. Such would also run counter to the principle of responsible government that is central in the parliamentary system like ours.

It also goes, within saying, that it is also within this framework that we have to discern the idea of constitutional monarchy.

As far as the rulers are concerned their power to appoint a menteri besar is different from the one they had in the constitutions framed under the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, under which they could just appoint anyone they pleased.

Under such a legal regime, the mentri besar appointed essentially holds office at the pleasure of the ruler concerned.

Then came constitutional monarchy

The position ceased to exist immediately after the constitutional monarchy came into being in 1959, the year the post-independence general election was held.

The notion of discretion on the part of the palace, as well as the power to dissolve the House, has to be understood within the framework of the parliamentary system, for which the prototype is the United Kingdom. Reference, the commission recommended, may also be made to other Commonwealth jurisdictions.

Having said that the law on the matter, whatever the provisions of the constitution say, is essentially this: that the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the rulers and the Yang di-Pertua Negeri, have no say when there is a majority in the House and that majority group has indicated in whom their support for the head of government lies.

Their job in these situations is just to hand over the letter of appointment to the member of the House concerned. Sultan Azlan Shah of Perak (1984-2014, right) summed up the role of the palace here as merely "giving constitutional endorsement to the decision of the party in power".

To say otherwise would run counter to the one provision that exists in all the federal or state constitutions: that the head of government – namely the prime minister, the menteri besar or the chief minister – does not hold office at the pleasure of the head of state.

This is the provision that stands as the pillar for the concept of responsible government in the cabinet system; something that differentiates the British system from the American one.

It was the adherence to the essence of the Westminster system that explained the reason why Queen Elizabeth II stayed in the background when Conservative leader David Cameron (left) and Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg negotiated the terms for a coalition government after the 2010 British general election, where no party held an absolute majority to form the new government.

And as soon as the two parties agreed to their terms, the Queen just sent for the Conservative leader to form the government, upon which the caretaker government led by the outgoing Prime Minister Gordon Brown ceased to exist.

This incident was particularly significant for, at least from the perspective of the Malaysian constitution, as it could have revived her prerogative powers. But such was the discernment and tact the British Sovereign had; something that explained why she has often been said as "never put her foot wrong".

It must be pointed out that, from the point of the palace as a constitutional monarch, it is unconstitutional for him to ignore the majority and to start screening the "candidates".

Job of palace in a clear majority

A constitutional monarch has a crucial role to protect the constitution, but in order to do that he must not allow himself to be dragged into the mud. A monarch that is no longer seen as reigning above party politics would not be able to play the role of the father figure assumed by monarchs such as King Bhumipol Adulyadej of Thailand.

In situations where there is a clear cut majority and one of them has already been named as the head of the government, the job of the palace is just to appoint that person.

In the words of Sultan Nazrin Shah of Perak, "(The Yang di-Pertuan Agong) appoints (and does not select) the Prime Minister. Correspondingly the Rulers at the state level appoint (the Menteri Besar)."

It was said that there was a certain amount of apprehension, given the personality of Labour leader who won the post-War general election in Britain. But somehow, the then British Sovereign – King George VI – set aside his personal feelings and chose to follow democratic dictates.

Similar patterns of ceremonies have prevailed in Malaysia at the federal level and these are indeed an overwhelming evidence of how the law is understood and practised in the country.

Thus it was not a mere coincidence that the Yang di-Pertuan Agong chose to stay aloof over the transfer of power between Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra and Abdul Razak Hussein in 1970.

As the former head of judiciary  Raja Azlan Shah said, His Majesty was just giving a constitutional approval for the decision made by Umno leaders. Another round of ritual was put on display when Razak died and his deputy Hussein Onn filled the shoes left by him.

Whatever happened between Hussein Onn and Dr Mahathir Mohamad in 1981 the National Palace did not interfere and it just, as a matter of ritual, handed over the appointment letter to the Mahathir as the new prime minister.

And when Mahathir's turn came in 2003, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong did not stand the in the way: his successor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi came and collected the letter of appointment without any fuss. The same thing took place when Umno decided that Najib Razak should take over from Abdullah in 2009.

Similar patterns of events took place at the state levels, where the heads of state merely put into effect what has been decided by the majority party in the state assemblies. This year, two such incidents took place: in Sarawak in April and then in Terengganu in May.

Palace merely stamped majority decisions

It was apparent that in all those instances, the palace merely presided a formal ceremony that gave the decision made by the majority party a stamp of constitutional approval.

And this should have also been the case in Selangor in 2014, when PKR decided to sack Menteri Besar Abdul Khalid Ibrahim. Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, who has put up 30 signed declarations of support in her favour, should have been allowed to go through the rituals that took place at federal level, as elaborated above.

It is perhaps worth mentioning one incident involving former prime minister Razak Hussein and Sultan Idris Shah of Perak after the 1974 general election. Razak insisted on the appointment of one Ghazali Jawi as the state menteri besar, something that he knew was unacceptable to the ruler.

As it happened, Razak persisted and, amazingly enough, the latter relented. In Selangor too the appointments of governments have been plain sailing in the foregoing years.

In fact, when Abu Hassan Omar was submitted as the menteri besar designate to replace Muhammad Muhammad Taib, who had to resign in 1997, the Abu Hassan was not even a member of Selangor State ssembly: he was still a minister in the Mahathir administration.

Later, when the more experienced Abu Hassan but was said to be uncooperative in the acquisition of Putrajaya, Umno replaced him with a rookie, the unknown Dr Mohd Khir Toyo. On both occasions the Selangor palace could have put up some constitutional questions – but it somehow it chose to go by the Umno decisions.

As such, what has happened since early August, including the snub on Anwar's request to have an audience on Aug 10, was rather puzzling. And more so when the palace secretary made it clear last week that it was a practice for the p[rime minister to be given an audience to present the candidate for the menteri besar’s office.

Appointment given based on party position

It must be pointed out that the audience granted to the prime minister was on the basis of his position as party leader, not as the head of the federal government. Therefore, constitutionally speaking, similar treatment should have been accorded to Anwar as leader of the Pakatan Rakyat, the majority party in the Selangor State Legislature.

Admittedly, there could be situations where the monarch, even as constitutional monarch, might assume a proactive role. Not to pursue personal interests, but to protect democracy and constitutionally.

This was the background for my answer to those who cited the refusal of the Sultan Terengganu to abide by the majority rule in 2008 to justify what happened in Selangor in 2014.

I have admitted, however, that the ruler was in no doubt wrong on the appointment rule, but he might be entitled to be given the benefit of the doubt given the character of the incumbent, the candidate submitted by Umno for the post of menteri besar.

The same could be said with regard to the Perlis case. In fact, here, the ruler might even be saved by the appointment rules themselves. The ruler of Perlis, to my mind, has a stronger ground to ignore the name submitted by Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the then Umno president.

However, having said that, it must be admitted that those deviations must not stand as the standard rule; it has to be treated as a mere exception and this only applies when the system has yet to become fully democratic and transparent.

One has to admit that given the lack of institutional support in Malaysia, there are times when we have to rely on the palace to do the unthinkable: to prevent the corrupt and autocratic candidates from assuming the post. However, it has to be said that Wan Azizah does not fall into this category.

In any case the palace should have granted Anwar a hearing, should it have reservations about her. This was what the ruler of Perak did in 1974, though Razak went on to insist on his choice.

Speaking with the benefit of hindsight, it may be said now that given that Tunku Abdul Rahman did not take the move to unseat him lying down, the National Palace could have delayed the replacement process.

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the outgoing premier argued then, queried the need to impose emergency. In fact, more questions can be asked now: such as, why the deputy and not the prime minister himself, who presented the advice to declare emergency?

Whatever the answers to these questions, it has to be stated that there were two different Yang di-Pertuan Agong at that point of time. The one who declared the emergency was the Sultan of Terengganu, while the one presiding the change of prime minister was the Sultan of Kedah, who, incidentally, is now serving as the head of the federation for the second time.

Back to Selangor, it is really disturbing to see certain quarters putting up banners and organising rallies supporting the palace for reasons that may not be constitutional.

The more so when this is led by characters such as the Selangor Umno strongman Noh Omar. Does he not realise that it was Umno, after losing Kelantan in the 1990 general election, that once demanded that the rulers' power to appoint the menteri besar be abolished?

BULETIN RAKYAT

BULETIN RAKYAT


MOHAMED AZMIN ALI ANGKAT SUMPAH SEBAGAI MB SELANGOR KE15

Posted: 22 Sep 2014 10:57 PM PDT

KLANG: Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (ADUN) Bukit Antarabangsa, Mohamed Azmin Ali sebentar tadi mengangkat sumpah sebagai Menteri Besar Selangor ke-15.

Istiadat Angkat Sumpah Jawatan dan Ikrar Aku Janji berlangsung di hadapan Sultan Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah di Istana Alam Shah, Klang pada jam 10. 41 pagi.

Mohamed Azmin, 50, turut melafazkan ikrar "Aku Janji" merangkumi 10 perkara yang perlu beliau penuhi dan patuhi dalam tempoh memegang jawatan menteri besar.

Antara Aku Janji itu ialah memelihara dan menjunjung prinsip Rukun Negara, memastikan agama Islam tidak diganggu gugat, mempertahankan institusi raja, memastikan hak orang Melayu terpelihara, menjaga hak sah kaum lain serta mendahulukan rakyat.

Turut hadir, ADUN Sijangkang Dr Ahmad Yunus Hairi; ADUN Selat Klang, Dr Halimah Ali; Speaker DUN Selangor, Hannah Yeoh; ADUN Chempaka, Iskandar Abdul Samad dan ADUN Sabak, Sallehin Mukhyi.

Bagaimanapun, kebanyakan ADUN daripada DAP dan PKR tidak kelihatan dalam upacara istiadat berkenaan.

Kawalan keselamatan di Istana Alam Shah di sini juga lebih ketat berbanding sebelum ini dengan sesiapa yang tidak tersenarai sebagai jemputan atau petugas media yang tidak berdaftar dengan Istana Selangor tidak dibenarkan masuk ke kawasan istana berkenaan.

Mohamed Azmin yang juga Ahli Parlimen Gombak dilantik ke jawatan berkenaan selepas Sultan Selangor memberi perkenan memilih nama beliau daripada beberapa nama yang dihantar kepada Baginda, awal bulan lalu.

Krisis Menteri Besar Selangor berlarutan sejak awal tahun ini apabila PKR mengumumkan Langkah Kajang bagi menggantikan Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim dengan Ketua Pembangkang, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

Bagaimanapun, berikutan keputusan mahkamah pada 7 Mac lalu yang mendapati Anwar bersalah dalam kes liwat 2, Datin Seri Wan Azizah Wan Ismail dicalonkan untuk mengisi jawatan itu.

Namun, selepas hampir dua bulan PKR cuba 'mendesak' Sultan menerima Timbalan Presiden PKR itu sebagai Menteri Besar, semalam, Istana Selangor mengutuskan surat kepada Mohamed Azmin mengesahkan pelantikan beliau sebagai Menteri Besar Selangor yang baharu.

Selesai istiadat mengangkat sumpah di sini, Mohamed Azmin dijadual mengadakan kenduri kesyukuran di kediaman ibunya di Kampung Klang Gate Baru, Kuala Lumpur bermula jam 12.30 tengah hari ini.

PARTI KEADILAN RAKYAT NEGERI SEMBILAN

PARTI KEADILAN RAKYAT NEGERI SEMBILAN


Azmin akan manfaatkan rizab tunai RM3 bilion

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:15 AM PDT


Dalam ucapan sulungnya selepas dilantik sebagai menteri besar Selangor yang baharu, Azmin Ali berikrar untuk memanfaatkan rizab tunai RM3 bilion dalam perbendaharaan negeri Selangor untuk "manfaat rakyat Selangor".

Menurut Azmin, beliau tidak mahu rizab itu kekal di atas kertas semata-mata.

"Setiap sen dana negeri Selangor adalah milik rakyat dan bukan milik pemimpin.

"Cara saya dana itu bukan di atas kertas tetapi diterjemahkan kepada program yang dapat memberi manfaat kepada rakyat Selangor," katanya dalam ucapan di hadapan rumah ibunya di Kampung Klang Gate Baru, Hulu Kelang, tengah hari ini.

Dalam ucapan sama, Azmin berikrar untuk menjalankan tugas secara turun padang dengan mendekati sendiri masalah penduduk Selangor.

"Banyak kerja yang tertangguh selama dua bulan ini.

"Cara kerja saya bukan dengan tie (tali leher) dan kot tetapi dengan lengan pendek dan seluar panjang... turun ke daerah untuk mendengar sendiri masalah rakyat dan selesaikan semuanya," katanya.

Terus masuk pejabat

Beliau memaklumkan orang ramai yang beliau akan terus ke pejabat menteri besar pada petang ini juga untuk membincangkan pelantikan exco yang akan diumumkan pada hari Jumaat ini.

"Saya juga akan masuk ke pejabat petang ini untuk berbincang tentang barisan exco yang baru," katanya.

Beliau turut berhasrat meningkatkan imej penjawat-penjawat awam Selangor untuk lebih dikenali sebagai penjawat awam yang cekap apabila bekerja dalam satu pasukan.

"Saya akan mengangkat martabat penjawat awam di negeri Selangor sebagai pasukan yang boleh menjalankan tanggungjawab secara kolektif," katanya dalam ucapan di hadapan kira-kira 300 orang hadirin.

Hadirin yang hadir rata-ratanya kelihatan ceria walaupun cuaca panas terik.

Mereka menghadiri kenduri kesyukuran yang diadakan di perkarangan rumah ibu Azmin, Che Tom Yahya di Kampung Klang Gate Baru, Ulu Klang.

Terdahulu, beliau berikrar untuk terus melaksanakan tanggungjawabnya sebagai menteri besar baru dalam mengekalkan keharmonian di Selangor bermula hari ini.

Imamkan 300 orang

Beliau berkata demikian dalam ucapan ringkas selepas mengimamkan solat Zuhur berjemaah di masjid berhampiran rumah ibunya, Masjid Kampung Klang Gate Baru, Hulu Kelang pada jam 1.25 tengah hari tadi.

"Amanah ini bukan satu keistimewaan tetapi tanggungjawab yang cukup besar untuk mengangkat martabat orang Melayu-Islam khususnya.

"Saya harap dengan dokongan tuan-tuan saya dapat jalankan tanggungjawab ini dengan jujur dan ikhlas kerana akhirnya saya perlu menjawab pada Allah Taala.

"Jadi saya berharap sekarang adalah waktu untuk kita mula bekerja.

"Saya juga telah menerima akujanji dengan Tuanku Sultan Selangor untuk menjaga keharmonian di negeri ini," katanya dalam ucapan tersebut di hadapan kira-kira 300 orang menyertai solat Zuhur berjemaah diimamkan Azmin.

Satu kenduri kesyukuran menyambut pelantikan Azmin sebagai MB akan berlangsung pada bermula jam 2.30 petang ini di kediaman ibunya di kampung yang sama.

Azmin mengangkat sumpah sebagai MB baharu menggantikan Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim di Istana Alam Shah Klang, pagi tadi

Istana perjelas sebab Azmin dipilih MB baru

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:13 AM PDT



Istana Selangor menjelaskan bahawa kelewatan pelantikan menteri besar Selangor adalah disebabkan pergolakan dalaman PKR dan ketidaksefahaman parti dalam Pakatan Rakyat dalam pencalonan menteri besar.

Dalam satu kenyataan hari ini, Setiausaha Sulit Sultan Selangor, Datuk Munir Bani berkata, keengganan DAP dan PKR mematuhi arahan Istana pada 27 Ogos untuk mencalonkan lebih dua nama, menyulitkan lagi tindakan Sultan sehingga terpaksa meneliti calon lain dalam parti itu yang tidak dicalonkan.

Menurutnya, Azmin dipilih kerana Sultan mempertimbangkan konsensus Pakatan Rakyat mengenai kerusi menteri besar di Selangor dan percaya beliau pilihan terbaik untuk mendapat sokongan semua parti.

"Baginda mengambil maklum bahawa kerajaan negeri Selangor dibentuk melalui kesepakatan tiga komponen parti PAS, PKR dan DAP.

"Baginda juga mengambil maklum kesefahaman di antara tiga parti tersebut bahawa menteri besar Selangor perlu dilantik di kalangan ADUN PKR untuk mendapatkan kepercayaan majoriti dan sokongan dari parti-parti Pakatan Rakyat di Dewan Negeri Selangor," katanya.

Kenyataan tersebut juga menyatakan Azmin, yang dilahirkan di Singapura telah bermastautin dan dibesarkan di Hulu Kelang, Gombak sejak tahun 1968.

Azmin mendapat surat lantikan dari Istana semalam untuk menggantikan Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim, menyelesaikan tanda tanya siapa bakal menerajui negeri terkaya di Malaysia ini.

PKR dan DAP semalam turut sebulat suara menyokong Azmin memberikan sokongan majoriti kepada beliau.

Kedua parti itu sebelum ini hanya menghantar satu nama iaitu presiden PKR Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail sehingga ditegur oleh Istana yang mahukan lebih dari dua nama dari setiap parti.
PAS pula telah menyatakan akan mengikut pilihan dari Sultan Selangor.

Bagaimanapun Munir tidak memberikan sebab mengapa Wan Azizah ditolak.

Beliau dalam kenyataan sama turut menyanggah kenyataan yang mendakwa Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Syah telah mencampuri pentadbiran kerajaan negeri termasuk pelantikan menteri besar Selangor.

"Untuk makluman umum, ingin dijelaskan sekali lagi bahawa Sultan Selangor tidak pernah mencampuri urusan pentadbiran kerajaan negeri selain dari menasihati Datuk Menteri Besar Selangor.

"Di dalam urusan pelantikan menteri besar, Sultan Selangor hanya bertindak menurut budi bicara baginda sebagaimana yang diperuntukkan di dalam Undang-undang Tubuh Kerajaan Selangor 1959," kata beliau

Azmin mahu perkukuh Selangor sebagai negeri maju, harmoni & bersatu padu

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:10 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR 23 SEPT: Menteri Besar Selangor yang baharu, Mohamed Azmin Ali berjanji akan menggalas amanah ini dengan penuh tanggungjawab, jujur dan berintegriti untuk memperkukuhkan Selangor sebagai negeri maju, harmoni serta bersatu-padu.
Azmin Ali
"Pentadbiran Kerajaan Negeri Selangor akan melaksanakan konsep Negeri Pembangunan atau developmental state berlandaskan amalan tata kelola yang baik, ketelusan dan kebertanggungjawaban," kata Azmin dalam kenyataan pertama beliau selepas mengangkat sumpah jawatan itu pagi tadi.

Tambahnya, beliau juga akan mendukung institusi demokrasi berparlimen dan Raja Berperlembagaan.
"Saya bersyukur ke hadrat Allah SWT di atas perlantikan ini dan saya menjunjung kasih di atas perkenan Tuanku Sultan melantik saya sebagai Datuk Menteri Besar," kata Azmin lagi.
Beliau turut menghargai sokongan dan laluan yang diberikan Presiden KEADILAN termasuk dokongan daripada 15 Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (Adun) DAP dan Pakatan Rakyat.
"Saya mengambil kesempatan ini untuk merakamkan terima kasih kepada Datuk Seri Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, Presiden KEADILAN dan Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, Ketua Umum KEADILAN serta seluruh Ahli Majlis Pimpinan Pusat (MPP) dan Adun Selangor atas kepercayaan serta sokongan untuk saya menerajui Selangor," kata Azmin.
Short URL: http://www.keadilandaily.com/?p=63076

MB Selangor: Exco baharu angkat sumpah Jumaat ini

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:09 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR 23 SEPT: Exco Kerajaan Selangor yang baharu akan majlis angkat sumpah di hadapan Sultan Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah pada Jumaat ini.
Menteri Besar, Mohamed Azmin Ali berkata, perbincangan mengenai pemilihan Exco akan dimulakan petang ini dan dijangka dapat diputuskan selewat-lewatnya pada Khamis.
Azmin Ali
"Kita akan ada perbincangan petang ini untuk lihat komposisi Exco. Saya akan segerakan kerana Tuanku menitahkan perkara ini agar dapat diselesai segera.

"Proses perbincangan belum bermula dan kita akan maklumkan. Istiadat angkat sumpah exco negeri akan diadakan Jumaat ini dan keputusan tertakluk kepada perbincangan," kata Azmin pada sidang media selepas majlis mengangkat sumpah Menteri Besar di Istana Alam Shah di Klang, hari ini.
Menurut Azmin, perbincangan bersama pemimpin komponen Pakatan Rakyat itu nanti turut merangkumi kedudukan empat Exco daripada PAS sedia ada.
Short URL: http://www.keadilandaily.com/?p=63078

Azmin angkat sumpah MB baharu Selangor

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:08 AM PDT

KLANG 23 SEPT: Timbalan Presiden KEADILAN, Mohamed Azmin Ali mengangkat sumpah sebagai Menteri Besar Selangor ke-15 di Istana Alam Shah, Klang pada jam 10.50 pagi ini.
Azmin Ali
Istiadat Angkat Sumpah Jawatan dan Ikrar Aku Janji itu berlangsung di hadapan Sultan Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah.

Azmin yang berbaju Melayu hitam serta bertanjak sambil memegang lembing Sang Buana turut melafazkan ikrar 10 aku janji.
Beliau kemudiannya menandatangani surat cara perlantikan jawatan Menteri Besar sambil disaksikan Hakim Mahkamah Tinggi Shah Alam, Datuk Mohamad Zabidin Mohd Diah.
Azmin yang juga Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (Adun) Bukit Antarabangsa menerima surat perlantikan yang ditandatangani Setiausaha Sulit Sultan Selangor, Datuk Mohamad Munir Bani, petang semalam.
KEADILAN dan DAP semalam turut sebulat suara menyokong perlantikan Azmin dengan memberikan sokongan majoriti kepada beliau.
Kedua-dua parti komponen Pakatan Rakyat itu sebelum ini hanya menghantar satu nama calon iaitu Presiden KEADILAN, Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.
Ekoran itu, Wan Azizah dalam kenyataan menyatakan, beliau menerima dengan hati terbuka perlantikan Azmin sekaligus menarik diri dari pencalonan dan mencadangkan kepada Majlis Pimpinan Pusat (MPP) KEADILAN agar Azmin diangkat sebagai calon Menteri Besar Selangor.
MPP yang bermesyuarat pada semalam juga sebulat suara bersetuju dengan cadangan itu.
Menurut Wan Azizah, keputusan tersebut demi kepentingan rakyat atas kesedaran bahawa krisis ini perlu diselesaikan secepat mungkin.
"Saya yakin bahawa KEADILAN telah kekal mempertahankan prinsip demokrasi Raja Berpelembagaan. Walaupun proses perlantikan ini pada hemat saya tidak menepati peruntukan Undang-undang Tubuh Negeri Selangor, saya percaya tumpuan perlu dikembalikan kepada usaha membela rakyat di Selangor," katanya.
Munir dalam kenyataan hari ini berkata, Azmin dipilih kerana Sultan mempertimbangkan konsensus Pakatan Rakyat mengenai kerusi Menteri Besar di Selangor dan percaya beliau pilihan terbaik untuk mendapat sokongan semua parti.
PAS pula menyatakan akan mengikut  calon pilihan dari Sultan Selangor.
Azmin mengambil alih jawatan Menteri Besar Selangor daripada Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim yang memegang jawatan itu lebih enam tahun bermula 2008.
Turut hadir, isteri Azmin, Shamsidar Taharin, Setiausaha Kerajaan Negeri, Datuk Mohammed Khusrin Munawi dan empat Exco PAS iaitu Dr Halimah Ali, Iskandar Samad, Dr Yunus Hairi, Sallehen Mukhyi serta Speaker Selangor, Hannah Yeoh.
Short URL: http://www.keadilandaily.com/?p=63055

Azmin Ali dilantik sebagai MB Selangor baharu

Posted: 23 Sep 2014 01:07 AM PDT

SHAH ALAM 22 SEPT: Timbalan Presiden KEADILAN, Mohamed Azmin Ali dilantik sebagai Menteri Besar Selangor yang baharu berkuatkuasa 23 September 2014.
Azmin Ali MB
Pelantikan itu mendapat perkenan Sultan Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah.

Azmin yang juga Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (Adun) Bukit Antarabangsa menerima surat pelantikan yang ditandatangani Setiausaha Sulit Sultan Selangor, Datuk Mohamad Munir Bani, petang tadi.
Menurut surat itu, majlis angkat sumpah akan diadakan di Istana Alam Shah, Klang pada pukul 10.30 pagi esok.
"Sukacita dimaklumkan bahawa Sultan Selangor telah berkenan melantik YB (Yang Berhormat) tuan untuk menjawat jawatan Menteri Besar Selangor berkuat kuasa 23 September (Selasa).
"Sehubungan itu, YB diminta hadir ke istiadat angkat sumpah jawatan dan ikrar aku janji serta pengurniaan surat cara pelantikan Yang Amat Berhormat Menteri Besar Selangor,"
"Kerjasama pihak YB dalam menyempurnakan perkara Sultan Selangor amat dihargai dan diucapkan terima kasih," jelas surat berkenaan.
Pelantikan Azmin sebagai Menteri Besar Selangor yang baharu sekaligus menamatkan spekulasi pengganti Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim.


Short URL: http://www.keadilandaily.com/?p=63043