Friday 30 August 2013

U.S. envoy set to leave Friday on mission to free American in North Korea

TOKYO (Reuters) - A U.S. envoy was set to leave Japan on Friday to secure the release of an imprisoned and ailing American missionary in North Korea, a move that could signal the start of a gradual thaw in relations between Washington and Pyongyang.

Robert King, special envoy for North Korean human rights issues, is scheduled to return from Pyongyang on Saturday after a one-day trip, an official at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo said. The official was unable to specify exact times.

The State Department has termed the trip a "humanitarian mission" and played down any connection between Bae's release and the North's sanctioned nuclear weapons programme, although the planned release follows a pattern of previous periods of tension and thaws.

King secured the release of another Korean-American missionary, Jung Young Su, in 2011 as part of a trip to assess North Korean pleas for food aid.

Relations between Washington and Pyongyang have been in deep freeze since the collapse of a food deal in early 2012, when North Korea broke its promise to end its long-range rocket launches and prevented nuclear inspectors from examining its nuclear stockpiles and production.

Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years hard labour for attempting to overthrow the North Korean state by spreading anti-government propaganda, according to North Korean media. His health has deteriorated since he was jailed and he has diabetes.

North Korean state media said Bae started his plot to "topple" the country's government in 2006, a date that coincides with his own testimony about his arrival in China.

It accused him of infiltrating 250 students into the country, spreading "false propaganda" and of bribing North Korean citizens in a bid to bring down the government.

Bae lived in a Chinese town that borders North Korea and worked for a tour company while undertaking missionary work inside North Korea.

North Korea says it practises religious freedom but religious expression is in effect tightly controlled in a state that acknowledges total loyalty to the Kim dynasty that has ruled for three generations. North Korea features at the bottom of most independent surveys of freedom.

In online postings of one of his speeches on his missionary work, Bae described himself and a party he took to North Korea as "warriors for Christ" and told of holding a prayer meeting on a beach.

The postings have since been removed, as have all traces of Bae's involvement with a tour company operating out of China.

In a videotaped sermon, also removed from the Internet, Bae talked of bringing 300 people to a coastal town in North Korea to emulate the biblical destruction of the walls of Jericho.

Bae's family has acknowledged his deeply held religious beliefs but have suggested that his sympathy for North Korean orphans may have been behind his arrest.

Expert: Gangs have over 40,310 members

GEORGE TOWN: A criminologist believes the 49 illegal organisations listed by the Home Ministry have more than 40,313 members.

University Sains Malaysia criminologist Prof Dr P. Sundramoorthy said he was certain the figure was higher if inactive gang members, financial backers and those who rely on gangs for a false sense of confidence were included.

Some of those who finance gangs are respectable people in society. Investments in underworld businesses such as the drug trade, betting rings and prostitution reap higher profits faster compared to legal investments,” he said.

Dr Sundramoorthy reiterated that preventive laws should be reintroduced to allow the detention of active gangsters since there were so many of them.

He was commenting on a statement by Home Ministry secretary-general Datuk Abdul Rahim Mohd Radzi that 40,313 people have been identified as members of 49 organisations, mostly gangs, that have been declared illegal.

In addition to reintroducing preventive laws, Dr Sundramoorthy said the authorities should use the Anti-Money Laundering Act to seize assets belonging to organisations which were obtained through illegal means.

He also said the Government should consider wiretapping to obtain evidence against the gangsters by monitoring their phone conversations, text messages, e-mails and any other form of communication.

The recently implemented Ops Cantas Khas to go after wanted criminals is a good move but it is only a temporary measure,” added Dr Sundramoorthy.

Celebrate Merdeka week on positive note

PETALING JAYA: “Be yourself! I like you this way” and “Life is short – Smile while you still have teeth” were some of the quotes written on the Post-It sponsored column at the #SaySomethingNice campaign (#SSNC) launch, held in Sunway Pyramid, in commemoration of Merdeka week.

The campaign is an initiative by Zubedy (M) Sdn Bhd’s managing director and founder Anas Zubedy to encourage Malaysians to propagate positivity and goodwill in their own creative and individual way.

Sunway Pyramid and Sunway Group of Shopping Malls’ chief operating officer Kevin Tan said the group, which provided the venue, appreciated Zubedy’s initiative and decided to be part of the campaign.

Make no mistake, peace and harmony does not come easy; it requires conscious effort and a strong will from every one of us,’’ said Tan.

Booths were set up in support of various organisations including the Society for the Severely Mentally Handicapped Selangor & Federal Territory, Yayasan 1Malaysia and the Malaysian Red Crescent Society (MRCS) Selangor.

The campaign will continue from Merdeka Day until Malaysia Day on Sept 16.

Zubedy said he hoped the campaign would instil a sense of goodwill and harmony among Malaysians long after it has ended.

He added that Malaysians of all races must start by saying something nice to each other first and subsequently begin doing nice things for one another.

Let us encourage the engagement and passion of all Malaysians to make this country a better and more harmonious one,’’ said Zubedy.

Thursday 29 August 2013

Five in family killed after MPV crashes into trailer

MUAR: Five people in a family who were returning to their Kampung Parit Amat, Parit Bakar home after attending the funeral of a relative in Kuantan were killed when the multi-purpose vehicle they were travelling in crashed into a stationary trailer parked along the Tangkak-Muar road here.

Three other members of the family, who were seriously injured in the 5.50am accident, have been warded at the Sultanah Fatimah Specialist Hospital here.

The dead have been identified as siblings Rokiah Othman, 62, Mahani, 56, and Jasilah, 42, Rokiah’s husband Basiron Kasiran, 74, and a relative, Ramlah Abu Bakar, 66.

Mahani’s three daughters, Siti Hajar Abdul Rahim, 30, a teacher, Siti Nur Ain, 24, and Siti Nur Suhada, 20, were injured.

What’s even more tragic is the fact that Suhada was supposed to start her studies at Universiti Kuala Lumpur this Sunday, and her mother Mahani, who is among the dead, had sacrificed her umrah trip to pay for her education.

Suhada, who suffered minor injuries, said the family left Kuantan at around 3am after paying their last respects to a relative who had just passed away.

She said she could not remember anything about the crash.

Next thing I knew, strangers were carrying me and my relatives out of the car,” she said at the hospital.

My mother had sacrificed her umrah savings to pay for my university tuition fees and was supposed to send me off to university this Sun­day,” she added between sobs.

Her aunts Rokiah and Jasilah, who was driving the MPV, and Ramlah, died on the spot while her mother and uncle Basiron died while being treated at the hospital.

Siti Nur Ain suffered a broken leg and Siti Hajar sustained severe injuries to her head.

Ledang OCPD Supt Harun Idris said the case would be investigated under Section 41 (1) of the Road Transport Act 1987.

Operations show promising signs of reducing violent crimes

CYBERJAYA: The Ops Cantas Khas has been going on smoothly, showing promising signs of reducing violent crimes in the country, said Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Mohd Bakri Zinin.

We will carry on with the operations until public perception on safety and the crime rate has been restored to acceptable levels. It has been a success so far,” he said.

There had been a significance decrease on violent crimes since it started, he said after attending the MoU signing ceremony between the police and Lim Kok Wing University on raising awareness on cybercrime here yesterday.

About 1,000 people, mostly gangsters, have been detained since Ops Cantas Khas started on Aug 17.

The Federal Nar­cotics Department has also detained 1,911 people, mostly those who committed drug-related offences, in the operation dubbed Ops Cantas Khas Narkotik.

In Johor Baru, state police chief Senior Deputy Comm Datuk Mohd Mokhtar Mohd Shariff said the police were clamping down on suspects for various offences under Ops Cantas Khas.

Since the launch of the operations, he said that 22,608 people had been checked, out of which 478 of them have been detained.

He said that 198 of those detained were suspected to be involved in narcotics cases.

Police had also arrested 11 suspects on the wanted list.

We have also seized several weapons during the checks, including guns, machetes, axes, hammers and a sword.”

SDCP Mohd Mokhtar added that about 9,000 police personnel statewide would continue their operations to ensure the safety of the people.

Businessman survives after being shot

KUANTAN: A businessman survived being shot twice and slashed by four assailants who then fled in his car in an early morning robbery.

Pahang deputy police chief Deputy Comm Datuk Jamaluddin Abd Majid said Lee Siew Meng, 42, was checking into a hotel in Jalan Air Putih here when he was approached by two of the suspects in the 4.20am incident.

The two men asked the victim where he was going and when Lee replied that he was checking in, they told him the hotel was full.

The suspects then hit the victim on the head and fired two shots at him,” DCP Jamaluddin said at a press conference at the district police headquarters here yesterday.

DCP Jamaluddin said one of the bullets penetrated Lee’s right shoulder and exited through his back while another hit him in the left rib.

Lee, who is from Kuala Tereng­ganu, also had a slash wound on his head.

He was sent to Tengku Ampuan Afzan Hospital and is reported to be stable after surgery to remove the bullets,” said DCP Jamalud­din.

He added that police believed the motive of the attack was to rob Lee of his Peugeot 308 car as they left his wallet containing RM988 untouched.

We will investigate whether this case is linked to the shooting in Jalan Haji Ahmad recently,” said DCP Jamaluddin.

On Aug 13, 35-year-old Ruze­lawati Basri escaped with a slight injury after she was shot by an unknown man in a carjacking attempt.

She had stopped her Toyota Alphard in front of a restaurant after refuelling at a petrol kiosk when the pistol-wielding man came and ordered her to get out.

Ruzelawati was injured in the right eye by glass fragments when the man fired a shot at her car.

Meanwhile, Lee’s wife Lee Chin Chin, 41, said her husband usually arrived in Kuantan in the afternoon but had set out late from Kuala Terengganu yesterday as he had things to do.

He goes to Kuantan every month to sell electrical appliances and was late because he still had some packing to do. He last SMSed me at about 12.30am, saying that he had arrived and was going to have some drinks with his friends,” said Chin Chin when met at Hospital Tengku Ampuan Afzan.

Chin Chin also said the stolen Peugeot 308 car was hers as Lee’s car was in the workshop for repairs.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

Japan formally raises Fukushima water leak to INES Level 3 incident

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's nuclear regulator said on Wednesday it has officially raised the severity rating of the latest radioactive water leak at the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant to Level 3 on an international scale for radiological releases.

The upgrade by Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) raises the rating of what was Japan's first warning on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES) since the three reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima plant in March 2011, which were triggered by a massive earthquake and tsunami. Those meltdowns were classified as Level 7, the highest INES rating.

The plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co, said last week that 300 tonnes of highly radioactive water leaked from a storage tank at the facility. The utility still does not know how long the water may have been leaking and said it was possible the contaminated water may have reached the Pacific Ocean.

The NRA had said last week that it may upgrade the severity of the crisis from a Level 1 "anomaly" to a Level 3 "serious incident" on the INES scale, after consultations with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Obama called Cameron again about Syria

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama called Prime Minister David Cameron about Syria again on Tuesday, the White House said, part of a flurry of international consultations he and his top officials have had with foreign leaders about how to respond to a chemical weapons attack by Syria on its citizens.

Since the attack on Wednesday, Obama and his top officials have made a total of at least 88 phone calls to foreign leaders, the White House said, with Obama speaking twice to Cameron.

Girl forced to have sex with strangers

MALACCA: Another teenage girl from Masjid Tanah has alleged that she was almost prostituted by her male acquaintance.

The incident came just three weeks after a man stormed a house here and fought two men inside before rescuing his 13-year-old daughter who was forced into the flesh trade.

In the latest incident, a Form Two girl claimed in a police report on Sunday that her male acquaintance had threatened to sell her to a Thai pimp if she refused to entertain his male friends.

The teenager alleged that at about 3am on Aug 3, she went on a joy ride with a male acquaintance nicknamed Gemok to a resort in Pengkalan Balak in Alor Gajah.

Mandela is the first recipient of Mahathir Award for Global Peace

PUTRAJAYA: The inaugural Mahathir Award for Global Peace has been awarded to former South African president Nelson Mandela.

Current South African president Jacob Zuma accepted the award on Mandela’s behalf.

Describing Mandela as a friend, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said it was appropriate that the South African leader was the first recipient of the award as he was truly a man of peace.

I remember the first time I met Mandela in Zambia just after he was released from prison in Robben Island.

I was expecting a broken or bitter man for he had spent 27 years in jail. Instead, I found a man who was extremely rational and who thought nothing but the welfare and well-being of the people in Africa,” he said.

Dr Mahathir said Mandela should have been bitter but the former president told him that he had made friends with the jailers who provided him with newspapers to read.

The Mahathir Award for Global Peace will be presented annually to recognise those who have made valiant efforts in promoting peace.

During his keynote address at the launch of the Mahathir Award for Global Peace here yesterday, Dr Mahathir said election candidates in all countries should pledge to abstain from war so that governments in the world would be dedicated to upholding peace.

The former prime minister said voters should not pick election candidates who do not make such a pledge.

The world is getting more democratic. People have the right to choose their governments and leaders,” he said.

Such a move, he said, would lead to the world having governments dedicated to peace.

The future generation has a role to play. It is going to be a long struggle but I am sure if young people realise the need to criminalise war, the need to promote peace, then God willing, peace can be achieved,” he said.

The Mahathir Award for Global Peace is an international peace award by the Mahathir Global Peace Foundation, which was formed to contribute to global peace efforts.

During the event, the foundation presented Dr Mahathir with the Lifetime Campaigner for Global Peace award.

Tuesday 27 August 2013

Najib: Talk first, don't fight to achieve world peace

PUTRAJAYA: Constructive engagement and dialogue should be preferred over armed conflict to resolve issues if lasting global peace is to be achieved said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

"It is imperative that we achieve a peace premised upon a covenant of the willing, not one enforced by hegemony or secured through coercion," he said this when officiating The Mahathir Award For Global Peace in Putrajaya on Tuesday.

He said the challenge faced by the international community was to collectively work together to find peace - not merely for this generation, but for all time.

He added that such noble efforts were crucial as mankind had yet to turn its back on its most primitive pastime of wagging war against each other despite advancements in civilisation.

"Whether border skirmishes or civil war, sectarian violence or military occupation, conflict continues to take a heavy toll on people and nations," he said.

In this regard, Najib praised the non-violent approach taken by renowned leader such as Nelson Mandela who chose reconciliation over retribution following the end of apartheid in South Africa.

"Faced with a choice between settling scores and healing wounds, President Mandela demonstrated that peace begins at home.

"The practice of peace begins with personal commitment to forgiveness and compassion," he added.

Najib also lauded Mahathir's effort and role in promoting global peace and his strong stance against war.

"Tun Mahathir works tirelessly to deliver a simple message that war should not be the preferred path to peace," he said.

To this end, he said the country had played an instrumental role in helping dismantle 300 years of apartheid in South Africa when Malaysia's first Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman made opposition to apartheid known.

He added that it was Mahathir who did the most in terms of working with the Commonwealth, the Non-Aligned Movement, the Zambian administration and African National Congress to help end apartheid.

He said it was this connection that has helped forged good relations between Malaysia and South Africa.

Earlier in his speech, South Africa president Jacob Zuma, who was present at the event on behalf of Mandela, said he was honoured that South Africa had produced such a global icon.

He said that both Mahathir and Mandela shared a personal friendship that extended back to 1990, when the Malaysia leader was amongst the first to greet the Africa leader in Zambia following his release from 27 years of imprisonment.

He added that Mandela, who turned 95 recently, is still receiving treatment at a hospital in South Africa and was in critical but stable condition.

Analysis: U.S. could look beyond U.N. Security Council in any Syria strike

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - In the face of a U.N. Security Council deadlocked on Syria, the United States and its allies could seek other means of legitimizing any retaliatory strike they launch against Syria's government for last week's alleged gas attack on civilians.

The 15-nation council has been split on Syria since 2011. Russia, President Bashar al-Assad's ally, and China have vetoed three resolutions condemning Assad and calling for punitive steps against his government.

But the United States has intervened in conflicts before without Security Council backing, most notably in the Kosovo War in 1999, and could do so again.

Any strike by the United States, Britain, France and others without a clear U.N. mandate would likely infuriate Russia, which could be expected to denounce it as illegal.

Richard Haas, president of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations think tank, rejected the idea - suggested by Russia - that a Western attack on Syria would need U.N. approval.

"The U.N. Security Council is not the sole or unique custodian about what is legal and what is legitimate, and, as many have pointed out, it was bypassed at the time of Kosovo," he told reporters in a conference call.

"To say only the U.N. Security Council can make something legitimate seems to me to be a position that cannot be supported because it would allow in this case a country like Russia to be the arbiter of international law and, more broadly, international relations," Haas said.

Legitimacy for a strike on Syria, Haas said, could come from a "coalition of the willing" of individual countries that support retaliation against Assad to demonstrate that the use of weapons of mass destruction will not be tolerated.

That coalition could include Arab countries and have formal backing from NATO or other institutions, he said.

U.S. and European officials have cited NATO's bombing campaign intended to pressure Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to withdraw troops and militia from Kosovo. In that case, the United States bypassed the Security Council to avoid a Russian veto and got backing instead from NATO.

The Arab League could also formally endorse military action against Syria as it did with Libya in 2011, said Richard Gowan, a foreign policy expert at New York University. But it might not be easy to secure a consensus in the Arab League and NATO.

"Some members of both blocs would have qualms about doing so, and the diplomacy could get messy," Gowan said.

U.S. President Barack Obama has tried to distinguish himself from his predecessor, George W. Bush, on foreign policy by presenting himself as more multilateralist. He no doubt would like some kind of international legitimacy if the United States attacked Syria.

But the tough tone of comments on Syria by Secretary of State John Kerry and strong suggestions that U.S. naval forces are moving into position might mean Obama will go ahead with an attack on Assad's forces no matter what.

White House spokesman Jay Carney on Monday deflected questions about whether Obama would seek authorization from the United Nations or the U.S. Congress for military strikes on Syria, saying the president had made no decision on the U.S. response.

Carney repeatedly said that Syria's government had conducted a "clear violation of an international norm" by allegedly using chemical weapons against civilians. Russia and Assad blame the rebels for the attack that killed hundreds in Damascus suburbs.

KOSOVO, IRAQ, LIBYA

Obama has some other options for legitimizing a retaliatory strike against Syria, apart from securing formal NATO and Arab League endorsements.

Article 51 of the U.N. Charter speaks of "the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations." In theory, Turkey or Israel could ask the United States and its allies for "self-defence" assistance in light of the cross-border violence the two countries have faced during Syria's two-year civil war.

But Article 51, U.N. diplomats say, might be difficult to construe as the basis for a response to an attack that did not directly affect any of Syria's neighbours, the United States or its allies.

There is also the "Uniting for Peace" resolution of 1950, which allows for the U.N. General Assembly to call an emergency session to take up matters related to international peace and security when the Security Council is deadlocked due to a disagreement between its permanent members.

That resolution enabled the United States and its allies to thwart Soviet attempts to use its Security Council veto to cut off support for U.N.-mandated forces in the 1950-53 Korean War.

U.N. diplomats say the United States would most likely not turn to "Uniting for Peace." But it is possible Washington could seek political support from the General Assembly in the form of a non-binding resolution to help legitimize action on Syria.

While it would not carry the legal weight of a Security Council mandate, an assembly resolution could demonstrate that most of the world supports retaliation - provided Washington secured sufficient support in the 193-nation body. All General Assembly votes on Syria have had a majority of nations opposing Assad, though that majority narrowed in the last vote.

The assembly option has potential, Gowan said.

"China and Russia will fulminate against any missile strikes on Syria, but they could be severely outnumbered at the U.N.," he said. "The General Assembly could offer political support for military action even if the Security Council is paralyzed."

But the assembly option might take time and it is not clear if Obama will be willing to wait if he decides to retaliate. There is also the option of an assembly approval after a strike has been carried out.

The International Committee of the Red Cross last year described the Syrian conflict as a civil war, which means the Geneva Conventions on warfare apply. Gassing could be a war crime or even crime against humanity, U.N. diplomats say.

The United States and its allies for more than a decade have carried out military actions that they say had international mandates, which Moscow has rejected.

Russia regarded the NATO operations during the Kosovo war as illegal. It also complained about the 2011 NATO operation to protect civilians in Libya, which ultimately led to the death of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi at the hands of rebel forces seeking to oust him.

Moscow abstained from a 2011 Security Council vote on Libya, allowing a U.N. authorization for what analysts say was the first enforcement of the U.N. doctrine of the "responsibility to protect" civilians. Since then it has often cited Libya as a reason for blocking U.N. action on Syria.

Russia has also cited the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, a conflict former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan once described as "illegal," as an argument against U.N. action on Syria. In that conflict, Washington assembled a "coalition of the willing" to attack Iraq over false allegations about weapons of mass destruction caches in the country.

Egyptian don: Ours is an internal crisis, we don't want it internationalised

KUALA LUMPUR: Internationalizing Egypt’s domestic issues will not help the crisis-torn country rebuild itself and its people, according to a political professor.

Prof Mohammad E. Salim of Cairo University said calls for the Org­anisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to discuss the Egyptian conflict would be of “no help” to his country.

He hoped that Malaysia, which made the calls, could look at other ways to help.

We do not mind other countries, including Malaysia, having bilateral discussions or even debates with Egyptian authorities,” he said.

But if outsiders interfere, things will be more complicated.

I was surprised that Malaysia wants the OIC to discuss about Egypt. Even if the intention is good, we are hoping to avoid it from being internationalized because the problem is truly a domestic matter.

We hope Malaysia will pursue the right path in wanting to help Egypt and it’s people,” he said here yesterday.

Prof Mohammad is with Cairo University’s faculty of social sciences and has set up a department of Malaysian studies, which has published 25 books on Malaysia.

Wisma Putra had written to the secretary-general of OIC to urge for an immediate meeting among Muslim countries to take a stand to resolve the conflicts in Egypt and Syria.

Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Anifah Aman said although Putrajaya had no intention of interfering in Egypt’s internal affairs, but as an organisation for Muslim countries, Malaysia wanted to see conflicts in the two countries resolved through mediation.

Prof Mohammad said Malaysia was considered as a model nation due to the progress and development it enjoyed.

He said that by March next year, Egypt would have a new constitution and would also hold a parliamentary and presidential election to elect a new government and leader.

This, he said, would pave the way for a clear road map to be drawn to build “the future Egypt”.

We hope this will be the way forward for us and that Egypt will grow to be the country which its people aspire it to be. We expect Malaysia to support us, including through investment, education and technical expertise,” he said.

Trauma of a child trapped in locked MPV

KUALA LUMPUR: A young boy was crying and desperately calling out for his mother from inside a locked multi purpose vehicle at a parking lot in front of Hospital Fatimah, Ipoh, Perak.

MCA Public Service and Complaints Department head Datuk Seri Michael Chong got to personally witness the trauma of the trapped child last Saturday – something he thought would not happen as such cases had hit the headlines time and again.

He was having breakfast at a shop near the hospital that day when he saw people and firemen surrounding the black MPV.

From inside the car, they could see the boy was sweating profusely, said Chong. The engine of the car was switched off and he could have been inside the car for more than half an hour.

He added if not for the passers-by, the boy might have suffered the same fate as other children who died after being trapped in vehicles.

Fire and Rescue Department team leader, Samsuddin Buki, could not break the window as he feared shattering the glass might harm the boy.

He patiently coaxed the boy to slowly unlock the car door. After about five minutes, the boy complied and he was rescued.

Chong said the mother looked nervous as she came back soon after her child was rescued.

The mother held the child briefly and then walked away after thanking the rescue team.

But I could tell that she was embarrassed with herself,” he said.

In an unrelated matter, Chong highlighted a plight of baker Lee Wa Cheng, 55, from Taman Kinrara, Puchong whose children were allegedly taken away by his Indonesian wife.

Married in 2004 through a matchmaking agency, he said Lee paid RM21,000 to the agency to get married to Nawaty Ng, 36.

Chong said Lee had lodged a police report on Aug 16 over the disappearance of his wife and children – three days after he came back from work to an empty house.

The wife was also not answering his calls,” he said, adding that Lee was begging for the wife to return their children to him.

Chong said Lee wanted at least the children, Lee Shi Ying, nine, and Shi Wen, four, to be returned to him.

He said the wife could go back to Indonesia if she wants to. He only wants the children back because they are Malaysians,” explained Chong.

According to the Immigration Department, the wife and children are still in the country,” he added.

Anyone with information, please contact Wisma MCA at 03-2203 3888 or 016-371 6003 (Lee) or call the nearest police station.

Monday 26 August 2013

U.N. experts in Syria to visit site of poison gas attack

BEIRUT (Reuters) - U.N. weapons experts are due on Monday to inspect a site where poison gas killed many hundreds of people in Damascus suburbs, amid calls from Western capitals for military action to punish the world's worst apparent chemical weapons attack in 25 years.

Syria agreed on Sunday to allow the inspectors to visit the site. The United States and its allies say evidence has been destroyed by government shelling of the area over the past five days, and the Syrian offer to allow inspectors came too late.

Washington has faced calls for action in response to Wednesday's attack, which came a year after President Barack Obama declared use of chemical weapons to be a "red line" which would require a firm response.

Obama has been reluctant to intervene in Syria's 2-1/2-year-old conflict and U.S. officials stressed that he has yet to make a decision on how to respond. A senior senator, Republican Bob Corker, said he believed Obama would ask Congress for authorisation to use force when lawmakers return from summer recess next month.

Secretary of State John Kerry said in a round of phone calls to his foreign counterparts that there was "very little doubt" the Syrian government had gassed its own citizens.

The State Department said Kerry emphasised this in calls to the foreign ministers of France, Britain and Canada as well as to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Russia, a major ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has suggested rebels may have been behind the chemical attack and said it would be a "tragic mistake" to jump to conclusions over who was responsible.

The White House said Obama and French President Francois Hollande "discussed possible responses by the international community".

British Prime Minister David Cameron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel agreed that "such an attack demanded a firm response from the international community," Cameron's office said.

Syria watchers said the government's decision to allow the inspections may have been an attempt to stave off intervention.

"My view is that the Syrian government's apparent agreement to the U.N. inspection has been triggered by the growing possibility of military action," said Malcolm Chalmers, Research Director at the Britain's Royal United Services Institute.

"I think that is why they are doing it."

In London, Foreign Secretary William Hague said evidence of a chemical attack could have already been destroyed by subsequent artillery shelling in the areas or degraded in the days following the strike.

"We have to be realistic now about what the U.N. team can achieve," he told reporters.

CEASEFIRE DURING INSPECTIONS

The United Nations said Damascus had agreed to a ceasefire while the U.N. experts are at the site for inspections.

Syria confirmed it had agreed to allow access to the inspectors, who arrived in Syria to investigate smaller chemical weapons allegations just three days before the huge incident, which occurred before dawn after a night of heavy bombardment.

Medicins sans Frontieres said at least 355 people were reported dead in three hospitals from symptoms of poisoning. Assad's opponents have given death tolls ranging from 500 to well over 1,000.

The experts' mandate is to find out whether chemical weapons were used, not to assign blame, but the evidence they collect, for example about the missile used, can provide a strong indication about the identity of the party responsible.

If the U.N. team obtains independent evidence, it could be easier to build an international diplomatic case for intervention. Former weapons investigators say every hour matters.

The team has been waiting in a Damascus luxury hotel a few miles from the site of what appears to have been the world's worst chemical weapons attack since Saddam Hussein's forces gassed thousands of Iraqi Kurds in 1988.

Syria's information minister said any U.S. military action would "create a ball of fire that will inflame the Middle East".

He said Damascus had evidence chemical arms were used by rebels fighting to topple Assad, not by his government. Western states say they believe the rebels lack access to poison gas or weapons that could deliver it.

Assad's closest ally Iran, repeating Obama's own previous rhetoric, said the United States should not cross a "red line" by attacking Syria.

Two and a half years since the start of a war that has already killed more than 100,000 people, the United States and its allies have yet to take direct action, despite long ago saying Assad must be removed from power.

KLIA besieged by delays

SEPANG: Flights in and out of the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) were delayed while traffic leading out of the airport to Kuala Lumpur came to a standstill yesterday evening.

AirAsia X CEO Azran Osman-Rani tweeted at 4.27pm: “Significant delays today at KLIA due to air traffic control congestion and diversions to Subang and Penang. Changes to runways due to winds”.

A check on the Malaysia Airports flight information system website also showed many flights in and out of the airport had been delayed, re-timed or cancelled.

Twitter users also said there was a traffic standstill on roads out of KLIA due to a fatal accident involving a motorcycle and a Honda CRV.

At the airport arrival hall, rows of disgruntled passengers were seen waiting for the airport and city taxis, with their luggage in tow.

S.Y. Sim who arrived on a flight from Hong Kong said she was stuck at the airport for almost two hours as there were no taxis available due to the traffic congestion.

It took me more than an hour to get a taxi as there were several hundreds of people queuing, starting from the customs counter to the taxi ticketing counter,” she said.

She added that she was forced to pay three times the normal rate for a taxi-van although she was travelling alone.

In George Town, at the Penang International Airport in Bayan Lepas, world number one squash player Datuk Nicol David was among those whose flights were delayed.

David said she boarded a flight from Amsterdam on Saturday evening and was scheduled to arrive at KLIA at 3pm and in Penang from KLIA at 6pm yesterday.

However, we were told that the traffic at KLIA was busy,” she said when met at the Penang Interna-tional Airport upon her arrival there at about 10.30pm.

Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd and Penang International Airport could not be reached for comment at press time.

Najib: Malaysia won't be what it is today if not for women

KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak says women must be treated as equals not only at home but in the office and everywhere else.

The Prime Minister said there was no denying that women – known for their determination, commitment and compassion – were the backbone of the nation.

All the successes the country enjoyed today could not have been attained without their participation, he said.

We must treat women not only as an equal but with respect everywhere and at all times, be it at home, office and even inside lifts.

“Women are a force to be reckoned with,” he said to applause from guests who packed the Putra World Trade Centre for the Women’s Day celebration. The theme this year is “Respect Women: Society Flourishes”.

When Najib talked about the “lifts”, it was obvious to the audience that the PM was referring to the incident in which a man was caught on camera assaulting his wife inside a hospital lift in Bukit Mertajam.

The man pleaded not guilty in a magistrate’s court on Aug 16 and the case is set for mention next month.

Najib said the accomplishments made by women were something to be proud of, citing that between 2009 and 2011, the number of women who enrolled in public universities for degree courses was over 65%. This year, 68% or 41,573 women obtained places in universities.

Female participation in the employment sector also saw a significant increase from 44.7% in 1995 to 49.5% last year. The number of those in the professional level stands at 14.8% last year from just 7.5% in 2005,” he pointed out. “These achievements clearly reflect the important role women play in changing the economic, social, political and cultural landscape of the nation.”

Najib said the Government had taken steps to eliminate any form of discrimination against women, including amending Article 8 (2) of the Federal Constitution in 2001 to prohibit discrimination against any citizen due to gender.

The Domestic Violence Act was also amended in 2011 to broaden the definition of domestic violence to also include emotional, mental and psychological abuse, he added.

Women wear many hats and they are known for their multi-tasking skills. We can help them by providing them an environment to complement their abilities such as setting up daycare centres at work places, flexible working hours and the option to work from home.”

Six individuals were awarded the Respect Women Award. They were Kuala Lumpur Hospital head of emergency and trauma department Prof Datuk Dr Abu Hassan Assari Abdullah who proposed the setting up of one-stop crisis centre at government hospitals to treat women who are victims of violence; Datuk Faridah Khalid and Datuk Ramani Gurusamy, who are deputy president and vice-president respectively at the National Council of Women’s Organisations.

The other three recipients were criminologist Kamal Affandi Hashim, DTE Consult Sdn Bhd and lawyer Tengku Naufal Tengku Mansor and president of Women for Women Society Ann Teo Chiang Joo.

Friday 23 August 2013

Altantuya murder: Court of Appeal frees cops

PUTRAJAYA: The Court of Appeal has overturned the conviction of two officers accused of the murder of Mongolian model Altantuya Shaariibuu.

The panel chaired by Justice Mohamed Apandi Ali allowed the appeal of the two for­mer Spe­cial Ac­tion Unit person­nel members, sparing them from the gallows.

The three-person panel which included Justices Linton Albert and Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat ruled that the cumulative effect of the misdirections by the trial judge had rendered the judgement unsafe.

"Thus with this, we acquit and discharge the two appellants," said Justice Tengku Maimun.

The family and supporters of the accused were seen sighing in relief, and uttering thanks when they heard the judgement, while the appellants remained stoic in the dock.

However, the government can still appeal Friday’s decision at the Federal Court. 

In 2009, Kpl Sirul Azhar Umar and C/Insp Azi­lah Hadri were convicted and sentenced to death by the Shah Alam High Court for killing the Mongolian woman at Mukim Bukit Raja, Klang, be­tween 10pm on Oct 19, 2006, and 1am on Oct 20, 2006.

For­mer po­lit­i­cal an­a­lyst Ab­dul Razak Baginda Baginda, who was jointly charged with them, was ac­quit­ted of by the High Court on Oct 31, 2008, after the pros­e­cu­tion failed to es­tab­lish a prima fa­cie case against him.

Deputy Solicitor General II Datuk Tun Abdul Majid Tun Hamzah lead the prosecution, while Kpl Sirul and C/Insp Azilah were represented by Kamarul Hisham and Datuk Hazman Ahmad, respectively.

Tragic end for student who went to pick up girlfriend

KUALA LUMPUR: It was supposed to be happiness for a sweet student couple Sia Chin Shin and his girlfriend Kwan Chin Yii from Universiti Putra Malaysia.

But tragedy struck when both were killed on the bus that plunged down the ravine at Genting Highlands Wednesday.

Sia, 22, had gone up to Genting Highlands to accompany Kwan, also 22, down from the resort after she had just finished her stint as a part-time worker. Sia was from Tampin while Kwan from Segamat. Both were classmates studying computer science.

According to a relative of Sia who did not want to be named, Sia took an overnight bus up to Genting Highlands against his father’s will to pick up his girlfriend.

He stayed there overnight with Kwan. The following day before they checked out of the hotel, he called his mother saying he was on his way back,” she said.

A childhood friend of Sia, who only wanted to be known as Goh, said Sia’s family suspected something was wrong when they failed to reach him on his cellphone.


According to Kwan’s father Chee Keong, 53, his daughter had been working for two weeks in Genting Highlands to earn some pocket money.

It was a part-time job selling souvenirs. It was only for two weeks as it was now her semester break,” he said when met at Kuala Lumpur Hospital.

Chee Keong said that the last time his daughter called home was on Tuesday, a day before the accident.

She called to tell us that she would be staying for another day with her friends after she finished her part-time job,” he added.

Meanwhile, Kampar-born Suki Low, 19, who went to the resort to meet her friend for lunch, also died.

Her aunt Jackie Low said: “She arrived there at around noon and left after lunch. She was a very friendly and helpful girl.”

Tough day for Genting bus drivers

GENTING HIGHLANDS: It was a tough day for bus drivers plying the route to Genting Highlands a day after the horrific bus crash that killed 37 and injured 16.

Nervous passengers clutching newspapers with photos of the rescue operations were incessantly questioning their drivers on the safety of their vehicles.

I checked the brakes and the tyres. Don’t worry, I have done this many times,” a bus driver was overheard telling his passengers.

The man, in his early 30s, drives for the same company that owns the ill-fated bus that plunged into a ravine on Wednesday.

Accidents like that happen rarely compared to the number of trips we make. When it happens, it’s usually because the bus was not checked properly or because it was overcrowded. Sometimes, it’s just bad luck,” said the driver of 15 years who did not want to be named.

He acknowledged that overcrowding of buses on the Genting route was common.

Sometimes, the bus would be so packed that people would sit on the steps. You cannot blame me for it. I don’t sell the tickets,” he said.

However, another driver who gave his name as Haflizam, said some vehicles had permits which allowed up to 18 standing passengers, in addition to those seated.

Another bus driver who gave his name as Andy said it was usually the older drivers who would skip checks on their bus.

Some know the road up and down very well. Sometimes, they drive fast to save time, with some bragging they can reach the bottom of the hill in 20 minutes,” he said.

At the bus terminal, sales consultant David Lee, 59 who travels to Genting regularly, said news of the accident did worry him but there was no choice but to trust their drivers.

Many times I’ve been in a bus that was speeding or overcrowded. But this is still the cheapest way. You have to risk it. What to do?”

Thursday 22 August 2013

Mugabe sworn in for five more years as Zimbabwe's president

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, Africa's oldest leader at 89, was sworn in on Thursday for a new five-year term in the face of criticism from opponents and the West that the election he won in July was deeply flawed.

Mugabe, who has ruled since independence from Britain in 1980, has told critics of his re-election to "go hang" and has vowed to press ahead with nationalist policies forcing foreign firms to turn over majority stakes to black Zimbabweans.


Abuse of power charge against China's Bo relates to murder case involving wife

JINAN, China (Reuters) - The charge of abuse of power against ousted former politician Bo Xilai relates to the murder case involving his wife, a court in eastern China said on Thursday.

Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, was found guilty last year of the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood.

Bo's former police chief, Wang Lijun, reported his suspicions about Gu to Bo, but Bo "boxed his ears", according to previous official accounts of Wang's trial last year.

According to sources, Bo was required by Communist Party rules to report the incident to central authorities in Beijing, meaning his failure to do so constituted a challenge to the party's top leadership.

Genting bus crash: Daunting task for rescuers

GENTING HIGHLANDS: Fire and Rescue Department personnel were faced with an enormous task when they rushed to the scene of a bus crash at Genting Highlands. The shattered bus lay some 60m in a ravine near the Chin Swee Cave temple and bodies were everywhere.

A rescuer from the Special Malay­sia Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team (Smart), who declined to be named, said mangled bodies were everywhere, adding that he had never seen carnage on such a scale.

Firemen used a construction crane with a long boom to lower the firemen to where the bus lay. The victims were brought up on a gondola attached to the boom of the crane.

It was a race to find the survivors because we all knew time was running out,” said Civil Defence Depart­ment (JPAM) officer Mohd Safari Nasaruddin, 29. “It was the first time I’ve seen so many bodies and I couldn’t stop to think about it.”

It was the worst road crash in the country’s history. Thirty-seven people were killed and 16 others injured after the bus went out of control, rammed a road barrier and plunged into the ravine.

The stage bus, which was ferrying 53 passengers, was reportedly “wobbly” before ramming into a barrier and plunging into a 60m ravine at Km3.5 of the Genting Highlands road while heading back to Kuala Lumpur at about 2.20pm yesterday.

The site where the wrecked bus lay was said to be a gory one.

Fire and Rescue department assistant director general (operations) Datuk Soiman Jahid said: “We believe the bus skidded out of control before smashing into the concrete road divider.”

He said the first victim was hoisted to safety at 3.38pm.

A total of 456 personnel from various agencies including the Fire and Rescue department, the police and Smart and Civil Defence department took part in the operation.”

Housing and Urban Wellbeing Minister Datuk Abdul Rahman Dahlan said the bus was a 44-seater and most of the passengers who survived the crash were seated at the back.

Asked if the bus was overloaded, Rahman replied: “You do the math.”

Rescuers had to rely on cranes as well as the Fire and Rescue department K-9 unit to search for victims. Rescue operations were hampered by a downpour.

At around 6pm, it started raining, with winds bringing in mist to envelope the hill slope where the wrecked bus was lying on its side. The situation was tense as rescuers moved quickly to extricate bodies.

As night fell, rescue personnel put up spotlights to help in the search. Rescue operations ended at 10pm.

Many people were waiting at the Selayang Hospital to find out if their loved ones were among the victims.

A check with JPJ showed the bus was blacklisted.

Genting bus crash: Search and rescue restarts; more victims?

GENTING HIGHLANDS: Search and rescue efforts have been restarted following claims from relatives that family members are still missing.

Bentong Deputy OCPD Deputy Supt Wan Azharuddin Wan Ismail said a total of 21 personnel from the Police General Operations Force (PGA) Battalion 4 and Battalion 7 and Fire and Rescue have rappelled down the 200ft slope to search for more victims at around 9.45am.

"We have reports from relatives who could not contact their loved ones.

"The search and rescue efforts will continue until we are satisfied that there are no more victims," he told reporters at the site of the accident on Thursday.

He added that the search team would also be looking out to recover identification documents or valuables from the wreckage.

"22 bodies have yet to be identified and we hope to retrieve documents that may help to identify them," he said.

DSP Wan Azharuddin said once the personnel conclude their operations, a briefing would be held to determine when the wrecked bus could be hoisted up.

Meanwhile, Malaysian Institute of Road Safety (Miros) deployed a remote controlled hexacopter equipped with a high definition camera to assess the scene.

Officials from both Miros and Road Safety Department (JKJR) are at the scene to get a clearer picture of how the crash occurred.

The crash, which occurred at around 2pm on Wednesday claimed the lives of 37 of the 53 passengers aboard.

Survivors claim the brakes on the bus failed before it hit the divider and plunged into the ravine.

Wednesday 21 August 2013

Britain says to raise reported Syrian chemical weapons use at U.N.

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain said on Wednesday it would raise a reported chemical weapons attack by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad at the United Nations Security Council and called on Damascus to give U.N. inspectors access to the site.

"I am deeply concerned by reports that hundreds of people, including children, have been killed in airstrikes and a chemical weapons attack on rebel-held areas near Damascus," British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in a statement.

Tonight’s “alternative” Blue Moon

Usually, when we talk about a Blue Moon, we’re referring to the relatively rare occurrence of a second full moon in a single month.

But just like months sometimes squeeze in an extra full moon, so do seasons.  Instead of having just three full moons, seasons – from time to time – tack on a fourth.

So there’s an alternative definition of Blue Moon: the third full moon in a four moon season.  As tonight’s full moon is the third of four this summer, it’s a Blue Moon by this standard.

[T]his definition actually preceded the more modern definition of a Blue Moon as being the second of two full moons to occur in one calendar month,” writes Earth Sky.

A Blue Moon is equally rare whichever definition you prefer.

[I]t’s inevitable that 7 out of 19 years will feature two full moons in one calendar month,” Earth Sky notes.

And it’s also inevitable that 7 out of 19 years will have four full moons in one season.”
Once in a Blue Moon,” as the saying goes.


Of course, under either definition, the term “Blue Moon” is a misnomer, as the moon is not actually the color blue.

In Washington, tonight’s Blue Moon rises at 7:27 p.m. in the eastern sky and sets Wednesday morning at 7:05 a.m.  Thus, from dusk to dawn, the Blue Moon will glow.  

It is officially 100 percent full at 9:45 p.m.

Tonight’s full moon is also known as the Sturgeon Moon. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, fishing tribes near the Great Lakes are credited with naming this moon – identifying the season when ample sturgeon were caught.

Japan to issue gravest Fukushima nuclear warning in two years - agency

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan will dramatically raise its warning about the severity of a toxic water leak at the Fukushima nuclear plant, its nuclear watchdog said on Wednesday, its most serious action since the plant was destroyed by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011.

The deepening crisis at the Fukushima plant will be upgraded from a level 1 "anomaly" to a level three "serious incident" on an international scale for radiological releases, a spokesman for Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) said.

That will mark the first time Japan has issued a warning on the International Nuclear Event Scale (INES) since three reactor meltdowns after the massive quake in March 2011.

Water still leaking from the plant is so contaminated that a person standing close to it for an hour would receive five times the annual recommended limit for nuclear workers in a year.

A maximum level 7 was declared at the battered plant after explosions led to a loss of power and cooling two years ago, confirming Fukushima as the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl a quarter of a century earlier.

Contaminated water with dangerously high levels of radiation is leaking from a storage tank at Fukushima, the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co said on Tuesday. The leak was classified as an "anomaly" earlier this week.

The NRA's impending assessment upgrade came in a document posted on the agency's website on Wednesday, with formal adoption to follow a meeting that is being held by the authority's commissioners, the NRA spokesman said by telephone.

"Judging from the amount and the density of the radiation in the contaminated water that leaked ... a level 3 assessment is appropriate," the document said.

The leak, which has not been plugged, is so contaminated that a person standing 50 cm (1.6 feet) away would, within an hour, receive a radiation dose five times the average annual global limit for nuclear workers.

After 10 hours, a worker in that proximity to the leak would develop radiation sickness with symptoms including nausea and a drop in white blood cells.

Each one-step INES increase represents a tenfold increase in severity, according to a factsheet on the website of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Federal Govt targets three months to come up with solution

PUTRAJAYA: The Federal Govern­ment is making another major attempt to find a solution to the long-drawn problem of depleting water reserves in Selangor.

It has targeted three months from now to come up with the solution centring on the Langat 2 water treatment project.

The special Cabinet committee to look into Selangor’s water woes, chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, will brief the Cabinet on its recommendations soon.

Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili said the recommendations would be in accordance with the Water Services Industry Act 2006 and that Selangor’s attempt to take over water concession in the state must be based on the “willing buyer, willing seller” concept.

I believe that the federal and state governments can solve this together for the good of the rakyat without having to resort to any legal action,” he told a press conference here yesterday.

“Our recommendation is that Langat 2 must go on but we must reach a consensus on the restructuring exercise based on negotiation and compromise.

I cannot disclose the specifics (or any) more than that but (we will use) these as our guide.”

The depleting water reserves in Selangor had pushed the Federal Government to call for the construction of the water treatment plant, which has been reported to be able to treat some 1.89 billion litres of raw water.

The supply of water is expected to cater to demands in Selangor, Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya until 2025.

Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim admitted recently the need for the water treatment plant but stressed that the state wanted to take over water concession on its own terms.

Abdul Khalid has proposed that all water assets in the state, including the Langat 2 water treatment plant, come under the state investment arm Kumpulan Darul Ehsan Bhd.

KDEB has made an offer to buy all the existing water assets in the state but Puncak Niaga Holdings Bhd, the major shareholder of water concessionaire Syabas, has yet to accept the offer.

Ongkili said both consumers and investors had been impacted by the delay in the construction of Langat 2.

“Overall, 710 (investment) projects have been postponed based on the advice of SPAN (the National Water Services Commission).

“We don’t want investors to start on a project but be unable to continue it because we could not guarantee them water.

It is not darurat (an emergency) but it (the depleting water reserves) is at a worrying stage,” Ongkili said.

Syabas has predicted that Selangor will experience the “big dry” in 2014 if the problem of depleting reserves is not solved.