Singapore

Guan Eng receives threatening call over son

PENANG Caretaker Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng has reportedly received a sinister threat involving his young son from an unidentified caller.

His political secretary Ng Wei Aik said around 1pm yesterday, the DAP headquarters received a call from an English-speaking person who warned that Lim should “take care of his son”.

NONE“It looks like they want to play dirty tactics already. So, we have lodged a police report against the person,” said Ng, who is Tanjung candidate.

Ng said that the DAP has also received information that the Internet servers of their party websites, including its Facebook, are slowing down and affecting traffic to the sites.

“We checked and this does not happen in Singapore. It looks like  they are trying to block us from accessing the Internet,” he said.

He urged the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) to play their “professional role” and take action on attempts to block the Internet sites of opposition parties.

“At the same time, please don’t just rely on the Internet, come to our ceramahs, especially the one to be held at Han Chiang College field, where DAP senior leader Kit Siang will be present,” he added.

‘More 1M’sia flags than voters’

Meanwhile, DAP state chief Chow Kon Yeow alleged that after eight days of campaigning, he noticed increasing incidences of “force, threats and money being used to get voters”.

“Such tactics are being done blatantly and openly, bringing our country backwards, while we are struggling to be a more democratic system.

bn flag with 1malaysia logo 250413 01“By using such tactics, BN is putting our people back to the olden days where money can help you achieve anything,” he said.

“We want people to prove that money is not everything, but what is more important is the pride and dignity of our children, which money can’t buy,” he added.

Chow said that Pakatan is unable to splash money around like its opponents but would rather promote its track record and future vision.

“We were naïve to expect BN to play a fair game. People are saying that there are more 1Malaysia flags than there are voters, and there is no place to hang them anymore,” quipped the Padang Kota candidate.

BN Manifesto to set up IOFC in Seberang Perai is realistic — Economist

BN Manifesto to set up IOFC in Seberang Perai is realistic — Economist

GEORGE TOWN — The Penang Barisan Nasional’s (BN) manifesto promising to set up an international offshore financial centre (IOFC)in Seberang Perai is realistic to diversify the economic sector in the state which is now focused on the manufacturing industry, an economist said today.

RAM Holdings Bhd chief economist Dr Yeah Kim Leng said today the proposal was timely because the location of the Pearl of the Orient was ideal to attract foreign investments.

He said the pledges in the manifesto were very realistic to spur economic development and create more job opportunies, thus speeding up development in the area.

“The proposal to set up an IOFC is very apt because it will provide the right platform for Penang, which is seen as needing to diversify its economic sector,” he told Bernama here today.

Dr Yeah said Penang’s economy, which all this while was driven by the manufacturing industry, must turn to other sectors like services, finance and technology- and innovation-based industries to maintain long-term revenue growth.

He said Penang was ideal for the setting up of the IOFC because it was a magnet capable of attracting capital flow from foreign investors due to its location.

“Setting up an IOFC in Penang can be seen as an achievement, like Singapore which has become a safe haven for deposits and asset management for foreign investors,” he said.

Moreover, he said, the state had a large group of foreign investors and was capable of providing cross-border financial flow facilities to foreign companies already operating in the region.

Dr Yeah said Penang was suitable to grow into a financial hub because it was a special place that could attract high-networking individuals like those in Indonesia to invest in education and medical services.

He also said that the establishment of an IOFC would have a high impact on the support industries like accounting and information communication technology (ICT).
 

This would indirectly benefit sectors related to finance and provide spillover effects for the locals, he said.

“The IOFC financial flow centre wil act as a revenue generator in terms of transaction fees and in turn bring about an increase in income generation,” he said.

It is understood that the IOFC proposed by the Penang BN will be modelled after the Labuan International Offshore Financial Centre which has offered international financing and business services since 1990.-BERNAMA-

Source: MOLE

Human trafficking syndicates growing

MANILA: Human trafficking syndicates are growing and becoming more organised helped by technology, Southeast Asian law-enforcement experts heard Thursday as they sought ways to tackle the issue together.

Experts from the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations met here to try to work out either a binding convention on human trafficking or a less stringent regional plan of action to enable ASEAN to act in unison.

"Trafficking in persons used to be number three (crime). Now, it has overtaken the (illegal) arms trade and it is number two globally," Philippine justice undersecretary Jose Salazar said as the talks got under way.

Salazar, who heads Manila's anti-trafficking task force, said human trafficking syndicates were expanding worldwide, helped by the Internet and other modern advances.

"They are more organised. They have the resources. They have been using the advances in technology for themselves," he said.

While some countries want an ASEAN convention against human trafficking, there are also fears that such a convention could infringe on the laws of individual nations.

Under the regional plan of action, members would not be obliged to follow all the provisions but would merely be asked to cooperate, he said.

The recommendations of the experts meeting here will be presented to ASEAN senior officials meeting in Vietnam later this year, he added.

The Philippines, which has almost 10 million citizens working overseas, was particularly vulnerable to human trafficking with many women going abroad for legitimate jobs only to be forced into prostitution, he said.

Figures for the number of people trafficked in ASEAN were being compiled but were not immediately available, he added.

He cited International Labour Organisation figures putting the number of people worldwide in forced labour at 20.9 million -- 5.5 million of them children.

Aside from the Philippines, ASEAN includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

ASEAN members have been criticised for not doing enough to fight human trafficking even though many of them send labourers overseas and some of them rely on imported workers.

Twist and shout, and the DAP spinned the ROS

Twist and shout, and the DAP spinned the ROS

KUALA LUMPUR: Journalist and blogger Datuk Ahirudin Attan – also known as Rocky – said a letter from the Registrar of Societies (ROS) regarding irregularities in the Democratic Action Party’s (DAP) Central Executive Committee (CEC) elections was professional and to-the-point but was spun and twisted by the DAP’s leadership. 

 

The letter, which was dated 17 April 2013 and signed by Dato’ Abdul Rahman Othman, Chairman of the Election Commission and Director-General of the ROS, said that the ROS had been made aware of a controversy whereby some DAP members were not satisfied with the outcome of the party’s CEC elections last December. 

 

The letter said “the validity of the Democratic Action Party’s Central Executive Committee which was chosen on 15 December 2012 is doubted”

 

The letter further stated that non-compliance with the requests made by the ROS could lead to deregistration of the party. 

 

Rocky said the letter was “to-the-point, professional” but was nonetheless given a different spin by the DAP and its leaders. 

 

“Yet it was not just spun, its content was twisted, turned and teared as the Lims cried, cried wolf and cried foul in the hope that the people would forget that it was them – not ROS or anyone else – who mucked up their own little in-house election back in December 2012 and it was their own comrades who lodged a complaint about procedural discrepancies that resulted in 753 party members denied their rights to vote,” Rocky wrote in a post about ‘the letter Guan Eng didn’t want you to read’. 

 

“Even so-called non-partisan observers like Bridget Welsh fell for it when she declared ‘This tactic is perhaps the most blatant. Do they assume that people do not respect fair play? Do they think that Malaysians are willing to accept a process that is unfair’? Did she forget the right of the 753 DAP members to fair play and a process that is ‘bersih’?” Rocky asked. 

 

He added: 

 

“Now, where in the ROS letter did you say the DAP would not be allowed to use its party logo for Nominations Day or/and General Elections?” 

 

Rocky was referring to a decision by DAP leadership to have its candidates contest under the banners of its Pakatan Rakyat partners, PAS and PKR in the wake of the letter from the ROS. 

 

Blogger Dave Avran highlighted a second letter to the DAP from the ROS, dated 19 April 2013, which stated that the party would not be hindered from using its own symbols during GE13. 

 

Avran pointed out that the controversy was caused by the DAP, not by the ROS, and that the latter had taken action because of complaints by members of the party and had “acted based on their standard operating procedure by asking DAP to submit its report on the matter”

 

The blogger further wrote: 

 

“There is no issue about DAP not being able to use its rocket symbol as the party is still a valid political party and its symbol is still registered with Election Commission. There is absolutely no issue about whether party secretary-general Lim Guan Eng can issue candidacy letters to the EC as he also served as secretary-general under the previous CEC.

 

“However, all the above facts have been conveniently spun by DAP to give the perception that the ROS had intentionally wanted to deregister the party.

 

“In typical DAPster spin, they used words such as ‘despicable’, ‘BN sabotage’, ‘worse than repressive Singapore’, ‘how can we trust their word’ (referring to the Election Commission) as well as questioning the timing of the letter.

 

“They also put up a drama by projecting themselves as being victimised and therefore having no choice but to use PAS or PKR symbols when in fact there is really no issue about using the rocket symbol.”

Source: MOLE

The "Rocket" that never meant to land on the "Moon" in the first place

Kudos to the Registrar of Societies who stood firm and called the DAP’s bluff despite the tears and the threat from the  Opposition public. As Frankie says, “there was never a threat to deregister the party”. If the Lims thought they had come up with a great plan to cover the big hole of their party elections in December, they may have dug the hole even deeper now …

Brilliance of DAP?
Sunday, April 21, 2013 – 19:23
by Frankie D’Cruz

THE stunning scheme by the DAP to use the logo of another party was a deliberate ploy to draw public sympathy, say party insiders.They said the unprecedented strategy brought to fore the moral and ethical shortfalls of the party leadership and exposed a “brilliant” plan that was hatched for a sterling performance at the stumps.Ground readings by The Malay Mail showed that while the DAP may have achieved that to a degree, the misstep by the party has also triggered outrage among party members and supporters.Despite going to the polls with its ‘rocket’, members of the largely Chinese DAP felt that the party’s intention to use PAS’ moon logowas an indication that both parties now accept each other’s ideologies.They said it was tactically a great move, as it could condition non-Muslim voters to view PAS favourably as well as dispel lingering notions among Muslims that the DAP was against PAS philosophy.The Chinese held that using the PAS logo was demeaning to the community. Muslims, on the other hand, berated the PAS leadership for the symbol accord and warned them not to sacrifice its principles.One party insider said the Registrar of Societies (RoS) did not bow to public pressure in allowing DAP candidates to use their own party symbol because “there never was a threat to deregister the party”.He said the RoS was procedurally right in not recognising DAP’s newlyelected central executive committee (CEC) after its party election results were called into question.“The party leadership failed to heed calls by the RoS to hold fresh elections and gave them ample time to do so. They insisted that the amended results were correct and acceptable. 

Why rocket never landed on the moon 

“However, the latest letter by the RoS to the party dated April 17 was ill-timed and caused widespread confusion that to my assessment resulted in a substantial number of fence sitters swinging towards the DAP,” he said.The letter stated that the RoS was doubtful of the validity of the CEC’s status on grounds that the complaints from 753 DAP members that they were disallowed from contesting the party elections last Dec. 15.It noted the technical glitch in the poll results was also a source of discontent among members. A revision of the results three weeks after the convention saw Vincent Wu drop to the 26th spot from the original sixth position, while Zairil Abdullah, originally 39th climbed up to 20th spot and earned a seat in the CEC.Another insider said the RoS had set April 18 for an inquiry, but the party asked for a postponement and set May 17 as the new date.“In the so-called party symbol crisis, the RoS was merely stating the obvious that it could not recognise the new CEC. It has neither declared the elections or the CEC null and void. Any decision about the legality of the elections would only come after a full inquiry.“The latest letter was just a reminder that the party must provide explanations to the satisfaction of the registrar, failing which the RoS can deregister the party.“Such reminders are common as many societies have similarly received such notices in the past,” he said.He said: “Even if the new CEC is not recognised by RoS, the party still can function as the previous committee can assume their duties until a decision on the new committee is made. This principle is similar to the caretaker function in any association and government.“So, there is no issue about the DAP not being able to use its rocket symbol as it is still a valid political party and its logo is still registered with Election Commission.“There is no issue about whether party the secretary-general (Lim Guan Eng) could issued letters of authorisation to party candidates as he also served as secretary-general in the previous CEC.”He said the facts had been brilliantly distorted by the DAP leadership to paint a picture that the RoS intentionally wanted to de-register the party with alleged Barisan Nasional prodding.The script that followed, he said, was “ingenious”. “To condition the mind of the people, they deliberately used words such as “despicable”, “BN sabotage”, “worse than repressive Singapore”, “how can we trust their word (referring to the Election Commission) as well as questioned the timing of such letter from the RoS.

Friends in S’pore start own ‘return to vote’ campaign

Several persons were spotted roving around the Jurong East MRT station in Singapore yesterday carrying placards urging Malaysians to return to their hometowns to vote.

One onlooker took a photograph of the scene and posted it onFacebook, where it went viral with over 1,800 ‘shares’ in just 17 hours.

NONEThis turned out to be part of a private initiative of a group of about 20 Malaysian expatriates working or studying on the island nation, whom, despite fears of reprisal from Singaporean authorities, said “it did not feel right” to do nothing ahead of the looming election.

The group’s founder, who asked only to be identified as ‘Ah Yin’, said she was inspired by another photograph that went viral onFacebook several days ago, which featured a man wearing Himpunan Hijau’s signature green T-shirt (right) and holding up a placard urging Malaysians to return to vote.

“I saw the photo and asked my friends in Singapore, ‘Do we want to do this?’ and they said ‘Why not?’ so it accidentally turned into this,” she said when contacted by Malaysiakini today.

She said the movement and its 20-odd participants move in small groups of about two or three in order to avoid drawing the attention of Singaporean authorities and their restrictive laws on political expression.

In addition, the campaign’s message was limited to urging Malaysians to return to vote instead of anything that may be perceived as more provocative.

‘Singapore gov’t afraid of anti-establishment sentiments’

“They (Singaporean government) are afraid that the anti-establishment sentiments would spread there from Malaysia,” she claimed, adding that her group would avoid confrontation with the police because they still hope to make a living there.

She said Jurong East MRT station was picked as the venue for the first day of their campaign because it was a major interchange where many Malaysians transit to catch a bus ride across the Johor Straits after work.

Regardless, their campaign did not start smoothly. Within 20 minutes of starting at about 4pm yesterday, a Singaporean angrily confronted her and a friend and told them to take their activism back to Malaysia.

NONE“He told us to leave immediately. We tried to speak to him but he wouldn’t listen at all and just kept scolding and scolding.

“We said to him that we are showing these (placards) to fellow Malaysians and not Singaporeans, but he won’t listen. He told us that we can’t do this in Singapore. Do what? It is not (a serious offence like) murder or arson,” she claimed.

The man even brandished his phone and threatened to call the police, and when she gave up and adjourned to a coffee shop for a drink, the man followed her there and only left some time afterwards.

However, she told Malaysiakini that other batches of the group’s activists who arrived later were able to campaign freely without interference.

She also said that the campaign was her own initiative and is not affiliated to the Jom Balik Undi campaign, which also calls for Malaysian expatriates to cast their votes at home.

The latter campaign also encourages Malaysian expatriates to take photos of themselves posing with a placard urging Malaysians to vote, and then post the photos on Facebook.

Alternate video sympathetic to BN

The two are just several of many separate online initiatives trying to persuade some 700,000 Malaysians abroad to vote on the 13th general election, slated for May 5.

NONEOne video posted on YouTube on April 10 drew over 28,000 viewers and over 1,000 ‘Likes’ in two days.

The video, about one minute and 40 seconds long, narrates one undergraduate student’s grievances with the status quo and her determination to do her part to change it.

On the same day, BN supporters edited the video and uploaded analternate version of it that is sympathetic of the ruling coalition.

Where the narrator of the original version had lamented, “many friends have left the country for better opportunities,” the altered version featured dubbed audio and swapped subtitles that say, “many friends are returning to help the country develop.”

As of writing, the doctored video has some 8,000 views and over 900 ‘Dislikes’.

Meanwhile, Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau reported yesterday that within a day of the polling date being announced, all bus tickets from Singapore to Ipoh have been sold out.

The article says that its reporters have surveyed three express bus companies, all of which were quoted saying that they have increased the number of trips to Ipoh.

However, the tickets were “selling out faster than Chinese New Year” and they could not cope with demand.

The city of Ipoh is divided between the parliamentary constituencies of Ipoh Timor and Ipoh Barat. Both are Chinese-majority seats with 82 percent and 65 percent of the population being Chinese Malaysians, respectively.

Budget airline AirAsia X is also running a promotional campaign where voters can get cheaper flights home to vote.

Although the Election Commission (EC) has allowed more Malaysia’s abroad to cast postal votes, the facility is not extended to Malaysians based in southern Thailand, Singapore, Brunei and Kalimantan.

NONESome expatriates have also complained that they were unable to register as postal voters because the EC’s website wasinaccessible, while the EC said there would be no extension of the deadline.

“I advise those who have failed to register before the deadline to look to themselves and ask why it happened that way, and return home to vote,” EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (left) had said.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=75718







Posted by
on Apr 12 2013. Filed under News.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0.
You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Friends in S’pore start own ‘return to vote’ campaign

Several persons were spotted roving around the Jurong East MRT station in Singapore yesterday carrying placards urging Malaysians to return to their hometowns to vote.

One onlooker took a photograph of the scene and posted it onFacebook, where it went viral with over 1,800 ‘shares’ in just 17 hours.

NONEThis turned out to be part of a private initiative of a group of about 20 Malaysian expatriates working or studying on the island nation, whom, despite fears of reprisal from Singaporean authorities, said “it did not feel right” to do nothing ahead of the looming election.

The group’s founder, who asked only to be identified as ‘Ah Yin’, said she was inspired by another photograph that went viral onFacebook several days ago, which featured a man wearing Himpunan Hijau’s signature green T-shirt (right) and holding up a placard urging Malaysians to return to vote.

“I saw the photo and asked my friends in Singapore, ‘Do we want to do this?’ and they said ‘Why not?’ so it accidentally turned into this,” she said when contacted by Malaysiakini today.

She said the movement and its 20-odd participants move in small groups of about two or three in order to avoid drawing the attention of Singaporean authorities and their restrictive laws on political expression.

In addition, the campaign’s message was limited to urging Malaysians to return to vote instead of anything that may be perceived as more provocative.

‘Singapore gov’t afraid of anti-establishment sentiments’

“They (Singaporean government) are afraid that the anti-establishment sentiments would spread there from Malaysia,” she claimed, adding that her group would avoid confrontation with the police because they still hope to make a living there.

She said Jurong East MRT station was picked as the venue for the first day of their campaign because it was a major interchange where many Malaysians transit to catch a bus ride across the Johor Straits after work.

Regardless, their campaign did not start smoothly. Within 20 minutes of starting at about 4pm yesterday, a Singaporean angrily confronted her and a friend and told them to take their activism back to Malaysia.

NONE“He told us to leave immediately. We tried to speak to him but he wouldn’t listen at all and just kept scolding and scolding.

“We said to him that we are showing these (placards) to fellow Malaysians and not Singaporeans, but he won’t listen. He told us that we can’t do this in Singapore. Do what? It is not (a serious offence like) murder or arson,” she claimed.

The man even brandished his phone and threatened to call the police, and when she gave up and adjourned to a coffee shop for a drink, the man followed her there and only left some time afterwards.

However, she told Malaysiakini that other batches of the group’s activists who arrived later were able to campaign freely without interference.

She also said that the campaign was her own initiative and is not affiliated to the Jom Balik Undi campaign, which also calls for Malaysian expatriates to cast their votes at home.

The latter campaign also encourages Malaysian expatriates to take photos of themselves posing with a placard urging Malaysians to vote, and then post the photos on Facebook.

Alternate video sympathetic to BN

The two are just several of many separate online initiatives trying to persuade some 700,000 Malaysians abroad to vote on the 13th general election, slated for May 5.

NONEOne video posted on YouTube on April 10 drew over 28,000 viewers and over 1,000 ‘Likes’ in two days.

The video, about one minute and 40 seconds long, narrates one undergraduate student’s grievances with the status quo and her determination to do her part to change it.

On the same day, BN supporters edited the video and uploaded analternate version of it that is sympathetic of the ruling coalition.

Where the narrator of the original version had lamented, “many friends have left the country for better opportunities,” the altered version featured dubbed audio and swapped subtitles that say, “many friends are returning to help the country develop.”

As of writing, the doctored video has some 8,000 views and over 900 ‘Dislikes’.

Meanwhile, Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau reported yesterday that within a day of the polling date being announced, all bus tickets from Singapore to Ipoh have been sold out.

The article says that its reporters have surveyed three express bus companies, all of which were quoted saying that they have increased the number of trips to Ipoh.

However, the tickets were “selling out faster than Chinese New Year” and they could not cope with demand.

The city of Ipoh is divided between the parliamentary constituencies of Ipoh Timor and Ipoh Barat. Both are Chinese-majority seats with 82 percent and 65 percent of the population being Chinese Malaysians, respectively.

Budget airline AirAsia X is also running a promotional campaign where voters can get cheaper flights home to vote.

Although the Election Commission (EC) has allowed more Malaysia’s abroad to cast postal votes, the facility is not extended to Malaysians based in southern Thailand, Singapore, Brunei and Kalimantan.

NONESome expatriates have also complained that they were unable to register as postal voters because the EC’s website wasinaccessible, while the EC said there would be no extension of the deadline.

“I advise those who have failed to register before the deadline to look to themselves and ask why it happened that way, and return home to vote,” EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (left) had said.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=75718







Posted by
on Apr 12 2013. Filed under News.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0.
You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Friends in S’pore start own ‘return to vote’ campaign

Several persons were spotted roving around the Jurong East MRT station in Singapore yesterday carrying placards urging Malaysians to return to their hometowns to vote.

One onlooker took a photograph of the scene and posted it onFacebook, where it went viral with over 1,800 ‘shares’ in just 17 hours.

NONEThis turned out to be part of a private initiative of a group of about 20 Malaysian expatriates working or studying on the island nation, whom, despite fears of reprisal from Singaporean authorities, said “it did not feel right” to do nothing ahead of the looming election.

The group’s founder, who asked only to be identified as ‘Ah Yin’, said she was inspired by another photograph that went viral onFacebook several days ago, which featured a man wearing Himpunan Hijau’s signature green T-shirt (right) and holding up a placard urging Malaysians to return to vote.

“I saw the photo and asked my friends in Singapore, ‘Do we want to do this?’ and they said ‘Why not?’ so it accidentally turned into this,” she said when contacted by Malaysiakini today.

She said the movement and its 20-odd participants move in small groups of about two or three in order to avoid drawing the attention of Singaporean authorities and their restrictive laws on political expression.

In addition, the campaign’s message was limited to urging Malaysians to return to vote instead of anything that may be perceived as more provocative.

‘Singapore gov’t afraid of anti-establishment sentiments’

“They (Singaporean government) are afraid that the anti-establishment sentiments would spread there from Malaysia,” she claimed, adding that her group would avoid confrontation with the police because they still hope to make a living there.

She said Jurong East MRT station was picked as the venue for the first day of their campaign because it was a major interchange where many Malaysians transit to catch a bus ride across the Johor Straits after work.

Regardless, their campaign did not start smoothly. Within 20 minutes of starting at about 4pm yesterday, a Singaporean angrily confronted her and a friend and told them to take their activism back to Malaysia.

NONE“He told us to leave immediately. We tried to speak to him but he wouldn’t listen at all and just kept scolding and scolding.

“We said to him that we are showing these (placards) to fellow Malaysians and not Singaporeans, but he won’t listen. He told us that we can’t do this in Singapore. Do what? It is not (a serious offence like) murder or arson,” she claimed.

The man even brandished his phone and threatened to call the police, and when she gave up and adjourned to a coffee shop for a drink, the man followed her there and only left some time afterwards.

However, she told Malaysiakini that other batches of the group’s activists who arrived later were able to campaign freely without interference.

She also said that the campaign was her own initiative and is not affiliated to the Jom Balik Undi campaign, which also calls for Malaysian expatriates to cast their votes at home.

The latter campaign also encourages Malaysian expatriates to take photos of themselves posing with a placard urging Malaysians to vote, and then post the photos on Facebook.

Alternate video sympathetic to BN

The two are just several of many separate online initiatives trying to persuade some 700,000 Malaysians abroad to vote on the 13th general election, slated for May 5.

NONEOne video posted on YouTube on April 10 drew over 28,000 viewers and over 1,000 ‘Likes’ in two days.

The video, about one minute and 40 seconds long, narrates one undergraduate student’s grievances with the status quo and her determination to do her part to change it.

On the same day, BN supporters edited the video and uploaded analternate version of it that is sympathetic of the ruling coalition.

Where the narrator of the original version had lamented, “many friends have left the country for better opportunities,” the altered version featured dubbed audio and swapped subtitles that say, “many friends are returning to help the country develop.”

As of writing, the doctored video has some 8,000 views and over 900 ‘Dislikes’.

Meanwhile, Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau reported yesterday that within a day of the polling date being announced, all bus tickets from Singapore to Ipoh have been sold out.

The article says that its reporters have surveyed three express bus companies, all of which were quoted saying that they have increased the number of trips to Ipoh.

However, the tickets were “selling out faster than Chinese New Year” and they could not cope with demand.

The city of Ipoh is divided between the parliamentary constituencies of Ipoh Timor and Ipoh Barat. Both are Chinese-majority seats with 82 percent and 65 percent of the population being Chinese Malaysians, respectively.

Budget airline AirAsia X is also running a promotional campaign where voters can get cheaper flights home to vote.

Although the Election Commission (EC) has allowed more Malaysia’s abroad to cast postal votes, the facility is not extended to Malaysians based in southern Thailand, Singapore, Brunei and Kalimantan.

NONESome expatriates have also complained that they were unable to register as postal voters because the EC’s website wasinaccessible, while the EC said there would be no extension of the deadline.

“I advise those who have failed to register before the deadline to look to themselves and ask why it happened that way, and return home to vote,” EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (left) had said.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=75718







Posted by
on Apr 12 2013. Filed under News.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0.
You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Friends in S’pore start own ‘return to vote’ campaign

Several persons were spotted roving around the Jurong East MRT station in Singapore yesterday carrying placards urging Malaysians to return to their hometowns to vote.

One onlooker took a photograph of the scene and posted it onFacebook, where it went viral with over 1,800 ‘shares’ in just 17 hours.

NONEThis turned out to be part of a private initiative of a group of about 20 Malaysian expatriates working or studying on the island nation, whom, despite fears of reprisal from Singaporean authorities, said “it did not feel right” to do nothing ahead of the looming election.

The group’s founder, who asked only to be identified as ‘Ah Yin’, said she was inspired by another photograph that went viral onFacebook several days ago, which featured a man wearing Himpunan Hijau’s signature green T-shirt (right) and holding up a placard urging Malaysians to return to vote.

“I saw the photo and asked my friends in Singapore, ‘Do we want to do this?’ and they said ‘Why not?’ so it accidentally turned into this,” she said when contacted by Malaysiakini today.

She said the movement and its 20-odd participants move in small groups of about two or three in order to avoid drawing the attention of Singaporean authorities and their restrictive laws on political expression.

In addition, the campaign’s message was limited to urging Malaysians to return to vote instead of anything that may be perceived as more provocative.

‘Singapore gov’t afraid of anti-establishment sentiments’

“They (Singaporean government) are afraid that the anti-establishment sentiments would spread there from Malaysia,” she claimed, adding that her group would avoid confrontation with the police because they still hope to make a living there.

She said Jurong East MRT station was picked as the venue for the first day of their campaign because it was a major interchange where many Malaysians transit to catch a bus ride across the Johor Straits after work.

Regardless, their campaign did not start smoothly. Within 20 minutes of starting at about 4pm yesterday, a Singaporean angrily confronted her and a friend and told them to take their activism back to Malaysia.

NONE“He told us to leave immediately. We tried to speak to him but he wouldn’t listen at all and just kept scolding and scolding.

“We said to him that we are showing these (placards) to fellow Malaysians and not Singaporeans, but he won’t listen. He told us that we can’t do this in Singapore. Do what? It is not (a serious offence like) murder or arson,” she claimed.

The man even brandished his phone and threatened to call the police, and when she gave up and adjourned to a coffee shop for a drink, the man followed her there and only left some time afterwards.

However, she told Malaysiakini that other batches of the group’s activists who arrived later were able to campaign freely without interference.

She also said that the campaign was her own initiative and is not affiliated to the Jom Balik Undi campaign, which also calls for Malaysian expatriates to cast their votes at home.

The latter campaign also encourages Malaysian expatriates to take photos of themselves posing with a placard urging Malaysians to vote, and then post the photos on Facebook.

Alternate video sympathetic to BN

The two are just several of many separate online initiatives trying to persuade some 700,000 Malaysians abroad to vote on the 13th general election, slated for May 5.

NONEOne video posted on YouTube on April 10 drew over 28,000 viewers and over 1,000 ‘Likes’ in two days.

The video, about one minute and 40 seconds long, narrates one undergraduate student’s grievances with the status quo and her determination to do her part to change it.

On the same day, BN supporters edited the video and uploaded analternate version of it that is sympathetic of the ruling coalition.

Where the narrator of the original version had lamented, “many friends have left the country for better opportunities,” the altered version featured dubbed audio and swapped subtitles that say, “many friends are returning to help the country develop.”

As of writing, the doctored video has some 8,000 views and over 900 ‘Dislikes’.

Meanwhile, Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau reported yesterday that within a day of the polling date being announced, all bus tickets from Singapore to Ipoh have been sold out.

The article says that its reporters have surveyed three express bus companies, all of which were quoted saying that they have increased the number of trips to Ipoh.

However, the tickets were “selling out faster than Chinese New Year” and they could not cope with demand.

The city of Ipoh is divided between the parliamentary constituencies of Ipoh Timor and Ipoh Barat. Both are Chinese-majority seats with 82 percent and 65 percent of the population being Chinese Malaysians, respectively.

Budget airline AirAsia X is also running a promotional campaign where voters can get cheaper flights home to vote.

Although the Election Commission (EC) has allowed more Malaysia’s abroad to cast postal votes, the facility is not extended to Malaysians based in southern Thailand, Singapore, Brunei and Kalimantan.

NONESome expatriates have also complained that they were unable to register as postal voters because the EC’s website wasinaccessible, while the EC said there would be no extension of the deadline.

“I advise those who have failed to register before the deadline to look to themselves and ask why it happened that way, and return home to vote,” EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (left) had said.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=75718







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Friends in S’pore start own ‘return to vote’ campaign

Several persons were spotted roving around the Jurong East MRT station in Singapore yesterday carrying placards urging Malaysians to return to their hometowns to vote.

One onlooker took a photograph of the scene and posted it onFacebook, where it went viral with over 1,800 ‘shares’ in just 17 hours.

NONEThis turned out to be part of a private initiative of a group of about 20 Malaysian expatriates working or studying on the island nation, whom, despite fears of reprisal from Singaporean authorities, said “it did not feel right” to do nothing ahead of the looming election.

The group’s founder, who asked only to be identified as ‘Ah Yin’, said she was inspired by another photograph that went viral onFacebook several days ago, which featured a man wearing Himpunan Hijau’s signature green T-shirt (right) and holding up a placard urging Malaysians to return to vote.

“I saw the photo and asked my friends in Singapore, ‘Do we want to do this?’ and they said ‘Why not?’ so it accidentally turned into this,” she said when contacted by Malaysiakini today.

She said the movement and its 20-odd participants move in small groups of about two or three in order to avoid drawing the attention of Singaporean authorities and their restrictive laws on political expression.

In addition, the campaign’s message was limited to urging Malaysians to return to vote instead of anything that may be perceived as more provocative.

‘Singapore gov’t afraid of anti-establishment sentiments’

“They (Singaporean government) are afraid that the anti-establishment sentiments would spread there from Malaysia,” she claimed, adding that her group would avoid confrontation with the police because they still hope to make a living there.

She said Jurong East MRT station was picked as the venue for the first day of their campaign because it was a major interchange where many Malaysians transit to catch a bus ride across the Johor Straits after work.

Regardless, their campaign did not start smoothly. Within 20 minutes of starting at about 4pm yesterday, a Singaporean angrily confronted her and a friend and told them to take their activism back to Malaysia.

NONE“He told us to leave immediately. We tried to speak to him but he wouldn’t listen at all and just kept scolding and scolding.

“We said to him that we are showing these (placards) to fellow Malaysians and not Singaporeans, but he won’t listen. He told us that we can’t do this in Singapore. Do what? It is not (a serious offence like) murder or arson,” she claimed.

The man even brandished his phone and threatened to call the police, and when she gave up and adjourned to a coffee shop for a drink, the man followed her there and only left some time afterwards.

However, she told Malaysiakini that other batches of the group’s activists who arrived later were able to campaign freely without interference.

She also said that the campaign was her own initiative and is not affiliated to the Jom Balik Undi campaign, which also calls for Malaysian expatriates to cast their votes at home.

The latter campaign also encourages Malaysian expatriates to take photos of themselves posing with a placard urging Malaysians to vote, and then post the photos on Facebook.

Alternate video sympathetic to BN

The two are just several of many separate online initiatives trying to persuade some 700,000 Malaysians abroad to vote on the 13th general election, slated for May 5.

NONEOne video posted on YouTube on April 10 drew over 28,000 viewers and over 1,000 ‘Likes’ in two days.

The video, about one minute and 40 seconds long, narrates one undergraduate student’s grievances with the status quo and her determination to do her part to change it.

On the same day, BN supporters edited the video and uploaded analternate version of it that is sympathetic of the ruling coalition.

Where the narrator of the original version had lamented, “many friends have left the country for better opportunities,” the altered version featured dubbed audio and swapped subtitles that say, “many friends are returning to help the country develop.”

As of writing, the doctored video has some 8,000 views and over 900 ‘Dislikes’.

Meanwhile, Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau reported yesterday that within a day of the polling date being announced, all bus tickets from Singapore to Ipoh have been sold out.

The article says that its reporters have surveyed three express bus companies, all of which were quoted saying that they have increased the number of trips to Ipoh.

However, the tickets were “selling out faster than Chinese New Year” and they could not cope with demand.

The city of Ipoh is divided between the parliamentary constituencies of Ipoh Timor and Ipoh Barat. Both are Chinese-majority seats with 82 percent and 65 percent of the population being Chinese Malaysians, respectively.

Budget airline AirAsia X is also running a promotional campaign where voters can get cheaper flights home to vote.

Although the Election Commission (EC) has allowed more Malaysia’s abroad to cast postal votes, the facility is not extended to Malaysians based in southern Thailand, Singapore, Brunei and Kalimantan.

NONESome expatriates have also complained that they were unable to register as postal voters because the EC’s website wasinaccessible, while the EC said there would be no extension of the deadline.

“I advise those who have failed to register before the deadline to look to themselves and ask why it happened that way, and return home to vote,” EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof (left) had said.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=75718







Posted by
on Apr 12 2013. Filed under News.
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