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DAP Sabah acting like Umno

SAPP is shocked that DAP turned its gun to attack SAPP on the Bersih signboard issue, doing the work for UMNO.

On the Bersih campaign in Sabah. Sabah DAP is talking like UMNO who claimed that people must “obey the law” and “not to challenge the laws”. This is the same type of flimsy arguments that UMNO ministers Hishammudin, Rais Yatim and even Perkasa”s Ibrahim Ali used against the brave Bersih activists.

Ibrahim Ali blew RM200-500 million that the Govt gave him and blames PR for being poor

This article, written by a Malay himself, is so true and sums up the Malay mentality in Malaysia . Its almost the same as the Palestinians who sold much of their seemingly barren land in today's Isreal and later blame the Jews for occupying them Whether you like or dislike the Jews they have the technology and ability to turn the dry, unproductive land into what it is today. Whatever it is, a successful people must have the 'resources' or brains to turn seemingly worthless things into something useful and stop blaming others. Imagine they can turn desert into farmland while the Palestinians have to rely on international aid.
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Sabah Umno has forgotten Usno’s sacrifice

Former Usno members, unhappy with Umno's short memory, are seeking
to reactivate their party in time for the 13th general election.
KOTA KINABALU: United Sabah New Organisation (Usno) have given the Registrar of Societies (ROS) and the Home Ministry 14 days to decide on the party’s application to be registered.

According to protem president Badaruddin Tun Mustapha, Usno had submitted its application to ROS Sabah on Oct 26 last year.

He said ROS Sabah had, when asked, told them that the file was now in Putrajaya.

Badaruddin said when protem vice president Abdullah Sani Abdul Salleh checked with ROS on June 28 this year, Abdullah was told that the file was now with the Home Ministry.

Fedup with the runaround, Badaruddin said they were giving the ROS and Home Ministry 14 days to respond to their official letter requesting an answer to the application.

“Failing this, our next course of action would be to ask for the Yang diPertuan Agong to step in.

“In this respect, Usno members will be handing a memorandum to the King through the Sabah Head of State,” he told a press conference in Beverly Hotel here yesterday.

Badaruddin said Usno’s protem committee during its meeting on Monday had also decided to urge the Barisan Nasional government to be transparent in its action against Usno, which he said was the party that gained independence for Sabah.

Ungrateful Umno

He said the BN government should be fair to Sabahans and allow former Usno members to reactivate the party, just like those in Peninsular Malaysia such as the Makkal Sakti, which only took about 60 days to be approved.

If the party failed to be registered by the 13th general election, Badaruddin said Usno will find other ways to use their own symbol and party name to contest.

Badaruddin, who is former Chief Minister Tun Mustapha Harun’s fourth son, said the new Usno is a party for all Malaysians unlike its predecessor.

According to him, the decision to revive the party with the same acronym of the United Sabah National Organisation (Usno) that was founded by his father was in response to the members displeasure over the non-approval of Club Usno, which they applied to be registered as an NGOs in 2006.

Badaruddin, 51, claims that the number of Club Usno members has grown to 100,000 throughout Sabah and that most of the old Usno members, particularly in the East Coast had never joined Umno.

“Usno is Usno and Umno is Umno but we are disappointed that Umno has forgotten about Usno, which brought them to Sabah,” he said of the deal which his father made that allowed the peninsula-based party to spread its wing to Sabah in 1994/1995.

Asked how confident he was that the Home Ministry would approve their application, he said: “The hope is thin but we are confident.

“If registered, Usno plans to contest all 60 state seats in the coming general election.”

Challenging Umno

On whether Usno would be aligned to BN or opposition or perhaps form a pact, he said: “We’ll cross the bridge when we get there”.

“In politics our door is always open,” said Badaruddin, who had contested in 1994 in Usukan for the PBS Plus (a pact between Usno and Parti Bersatu Sabah).

If registered as a party, Usno is expected to put up a strong challenge against Umno and other state political parties in the general elections.

“I remember a deputy chief minister said a few weeks ago that if you want to make noise, contest in the general election then we can tell who is greater.

“So I asked Yahya Hussin (deputy CM) please help us to approve our party then we can know whether Umno can beat Usno or not,” he said.

Nearly 50 members representing the various constituencies in Sabah attended the function together with some of the 13 protem committee members.

The old Usno was disbanded by Tun Mustapha following the entry of Umno into Sabah with most of its members being absorbed into the party.

The outing of Anas Zubedy

By Commander (Rtd) S. Thayaparan | 29 June 2011
CPIAsia

Introduction by CPI

Although this rebuttal to an open letter has been posed elsewhere, we feel it deserves wider public attention. This is because the subject matter with which the two letters deal, and the opinions expressed are representative of the divergent perspectives among the Malay and non-Malay elite regarding the rights of the various communities and their proper place in the country.

We will leave it to readers to decide on which one is the more persuasive perspective intellectually and morally.

Mat Zain wants Altantuya accused retried

(The Malaysian Inisder) - Datuk Mat Zain Ibrahim urged today Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak to step in and relook the Attorney-General’s (A-G) prosecution of two policemen now on death row for the murder of Mongolian model Altantuya Shaariibuu.

The retired cop accused the A-G of mishandling the case, which reflects a miscarriage of justice as the motive for murder was never found.

Q&A: Malaysia’s Ambiga Sreenevasan

The question now is whether Malaysia’s opposition groups
can capitalize on the momentum from Saturday’s rally and
force further changes in one of Southeast Asia’s linchpin
economies– or if voters will continue to stick with
Mr. Najib and the ruling coalition that has dominated
Malaysia since it gained independence from Britain
several decades ago.
By Celine Fernandez, The Wall Street Journal

An estimated 20,000 protesters gathered in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday to call for reforms to Malaysia’s electoral system. The surprisingly large turnout—and the government’s tough response, with water cannons and tear gas—appears to have galvanized the country’s opposition, which until recently had struggled to gain traction against a government led by Prime Minister Najib Razak.

The protesters believe Malaysia’s government must reform to reduce electoral fraud and create a level playing field for all parties, including the opposition. Government officials say rally organizers were trying to embarrass the government, garner sympathy for opposition politicians and threaten social order.

Musa silent as Sabah suffers cement shortage

KOTA KINABALU: A serious shortage of cement has hit Sabah again and contractors in the state want answers from Chief Minister Musa Aman’s administration which, incidentally, has a stake in the industry through a monopoly company.

But four weeks into the shortage, there’s not even a whimper from the state government, despite cries for help from consumers and developers.

Press Release: Movement for Change, Sarawak (MoCS) on 13th July, 2011.


MoCS will hold a ‘Rally for democracy and reforms in Sarawak’ on Saturday, August 13 in Kuching.

The movement’s leaders who met in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday have decided to tone down the event – originally planned as an anti-Taib rally - to ‘A walk for democracy and reforms’.


Rantings by MM: My Bersih 2.0 experience

So I went.

I have to say that the night before I had many many misgivings, especially after reading about the army doing exercises with the FRU. Could the government seriously be contemplating shooting their own people? Who knows? My stomach was in knots thinking about the many young people I knew who were intent on going, including my daughter. Would I be able to forgive myself if something happened to them?

Tengku Adnan explains Bersih crackdown to Jakarta

KUALA LUMPUR, July 12 — The Najib administration took the unusual step of sending Umno secretary-general Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Mansor to Jakarta to explain Saturday’s Bersih rally and allay fears of unrest as Indonesia’s oldest English paper criticised the crackdown.

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