Jumaat, 1 Julai 2011

BLOG - BLOG PARTI DAP

BLOG - BLOG PARTI DAP


Piow With You 文标与你

Posted: 01 Jul 2011 01:40 AM PDT

Piow With You 文标与你


Posted: 30 Jun 2011 09:20 PM PDT

Lim Kit Siang

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 11:15 PM PDT

Lim Kit Siang


Open Letter – Cabinet should end the “madness” unleashed in past week

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 06:00 PM PDT

The Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister, Cabinet Ministers. Cabinet should end the "madness" unleashed in past week with police required to arrest those wearing the Bersih 2.0 T-shirt, yellow virtually becoming a colour of crime and "Bersih" a dirty word I am writing this short Open Letter to the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister [...]

Bersih rally a turning point for democracy

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 12:29 PM PDT

by Kim Quek The Malaysian Insider Jun 30, 2011 JUNE 30 — Amidst the frenzy of draconian measures to prevent the July 9 Bersih rally from taking place, many Malaysians have begun to wonder: Has Malaysia descended into a state of lawlessness? No sooner had the home minister declared that wearing the yellow Bersih T-shirt [...]

I’ll wear yellow baju raya

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 12:10 PM PDT

by Mohd Syahir Sulaiman The Malaysian Insider Jun 30, 2011 JUNE 30 — Semakin lara kita didera bara, kita laungkan juga pesan merdeka, demokrasi sebenderang mentari, sehasrat hajat semurni harga diri — A. Samad Said. Yellow symbolises wisdom. July 9th is just around the corner, and talks get heated up in every corner, from Facebook [...]

Malaysia’s season of fear

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 11:48 AM PDT

by Praba Ganesan The Malaysian Insider Jun 30, 2011 JUNE 30 — "Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?" Joseph Welch, the attorney representing the US Army, asked this of Senator Joseph McCarthy at the height of the series of "witch-hunts" under the guise of [...]

Why July 9 must go on

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 04:19 AM PDT

by June Rubis The Malaysian Insider Jun 30, 2011 JUNE 30 — I've noticed something interesting of late. A few middle-class intellectuals back-pedalling on their initial support for Bersih 2.0. They say, yes I support this (in theory) but do we really need to march now? Haven't we done enough to highlight the issues? Haven't [...]

23 Kajang councillors hauled up over Bersih T-shirts

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 03:14 AM PDT

Jimadie Shah Othman | Jun 30, 11 Malaysiakini The clampdown against Bersih T-shirts continues, with 23 Kajang councillors being called up by police today for questioning for wearing the shirts at the full board meeting yesterday. But of this number, only seven were present at the Kajang district police station this evening, while the others [...]

EC Deputy Chairman Wan Ahmad showed his true colours of lacking 3Is of independence, impartiality and integrity when he launched attacks on Bersih as Pakatan Rakyat “stooge”

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 02:52 AM PDT

If there is a nation-wide quiz asking Malaysians who could be responsible for the two following headlines on online media today, "Bersih is Pakatan stooge in bid for Putrajaya" and "Bersih Pakatan's catspaw", I don't think anyone who is not in the know could get it right despite everyone being given three guesses each. The [...]

Home minister ‘cooking up’ laws

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 02:50 AM PDT

By Tarani Palani | June 30, 2011 Free Malaysia Today KUALA LUMPUR: Opposition MPs today criticised Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein for acting outside the law in banning the yellow Bersih 2.0 T-shirts and questioned the legal basis for the Bersih-related clampdown."We have a minister who is making the law on the run without parliamentary sanction," [...]

Bersih to cops: Name route, we will follow

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 01:57 AM PDT

Joseph Sipalan | Jun 30, 11 Malaysiakini Despite the string of arrests and dire warnings from the police, the Bersih 2.0 committee today sought to make peace with the men in blue and asked for their help to make their July 9 rally a peaceful event. Bersih 2.0 chief S Ambiga said they had a [...]

‘Yellow wave’ in Parliament by Pakatan reps

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 11:55 PM PDT

By Hazlan Zakaria | Jun 30, 11 Malaysiakini Pakatan Rakyat MPs turned up in Parliament decked out in various articles in the distinctive yellow of Bersih to protest the police clampdown on the electoral reform rally. Most of the men sported ties in the ‘official’ Bersih 2.0 colour or others in shades of yellow, while [...]

Anas responds to Commander (Rtd) S. Thayaparan

Posted: 29 Jun 2011 11:52 PM PDT

By Anas Zubedy Commander (Rtd) S. Thayaparan, Thank you for your letter. It is nice to see that you started your letter with a salam, although in zorro-unmasked.blogspot.com, they took out the earlier parts of your letter. I would like to make a few comments. Like you, I am not for race-based political parties. I [...]

Charles Santiago

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 11:04 PM PDT

Charles Santiago


Malaysia: End mass repression of pro-reform activists

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 09:31 PM PDT

30 June 2011

Malaysian authorities are arbitrarily arresting and detaining scores of peaceful electoral reform protesters in the worse repression of free speech and freedom of assembly in recent years, Amnesty International said today.

Among those currently detained are 30 peaceful activists from the Socialist Party who were denied review of their detention today under accusations of "waging war against the king".

Since 24 June, more than 100 activists have been arrested or questioned by police over their support of an electoral reform rally. The demonstration is being planned for 9 July by the Coalition for Fair and Free Elections, also known as Bersih 2.0, meaning 'Clean'.

"The Malaysian authorities are muzzling calls for electoral reform by throwing peaceful protestors in jail," said Donna Guest, Deputy Asia-Pacific Director at Amnesty International. "We have not seen such a crackdown on political activists across Malaysia in many years."

People have been arrested for as little as wearing yellow (the colour of Bersih 2.0), are being held without charge, and face investigation for sedition and unlawful assembly.  The government has also threatened to invoke the draconian Internal Security Act over the rally, allowing for indefinite detention without trial.

"Malaysia is undermining its claim to be a moderate democracy through this campaign of repression," said Donna Guest.

Amnesty International is calling for Malaysia to immediately release all activists or charge them with a recognizably criminal offence , drop unfounded charges, and respect the right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.

Today, the Penang High Court dismissed a review of the arbitrary detention of 30 Socialist Party activists, remanding them without charge for "waging war against the king," which is punishable by life imprisonment.  The activists, including two children, were arrested en route to a Bersih 2.0 event in Penang on 25 June.

Among these detainees is Socialist Party member of parliament Dr Jeyakumar Devaraj, who was denied access to essential heart medication for 15 hours while in detention, before being sent to a hospital for treatment.

Four more people were arrested and released today, including a Perak state assemblymen and a member of parliament, for wearing yellow.

On 29 June, police raided the office of the Bersih 2.0 Secretariat without a warrant, briefly detaining seven people and confiscating laptops, cameras, and rally materials.

The chair of the Bersih 2.0 Organising committee, prominent lawyer Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan, and Malaysian Poet Laureate A Samad Said are both being investigated by police under the Sedition Act and Police Act for organising an "unlawful assembly".

Malaysia's home minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, threatened on 26 June to invoke the Internal Security Act against rally organisers, on the grounds of national security.

"This repression is clearly politically motivated to intimidate people from marching for electoral reform," said Donna Guest. "The use of repressive laws to criminalise peaceful political activism is appalling."

Bersih 2.0 plans to hold the 9 July rally to demand a set of electoral reforms. These include fair access of all political parties to the media, reform of postal ballots and revisions of the electoral roll to address irregularities.


Charles Santiago

Ahli Parlimen Klang


MY VOICE FOR NATION

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 01:01 PM PDT

MY VOICE FOR NATION


Posted: 30 Jun 2011 06:03 AM PDT

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 12:37 AM PDT

Tiada ulasan:

Catat Ulasan