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Najib has no choice in order to protect a massive Nong chick Frauds he has appointed Tengku Adnan,

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Ku Nam con man seeking revenge  against Mahatir teams up with a master of the big con Najib to help to  win UMNO PRESIDENT POST

But if the voting public recognizes that it is being burdened with Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s choices for his new Cabinet named today appear dictated by elections – the Umno polls later this year and concern that Sabah and Sarawak will not tolerate any more snubbing in the government.

How najib con his voters to make sense when tainted corrupt politicians are made. Ministers?

Frauds that have Najib’s official sanction in Malaysia

Despite I being the person who sits on the fence and watches the fun, I salute Najib in my own weird way.

Let me confess. There are  politicians on the planet who has never come in the vicinity of my idiosyncratic, critical eye.

Even among the greatest of zombies  you could ever see, very few are interested in fightling lost battles. The tendency of mere mortals is to go for either targets within your reach; or targets which are a touch difficult. try and fight for  causes despite the knowledge that Najib may not be alive see them, orhis ideology, win.he is idiosyncratic  of the highest order and have put UMNO on the line in his  mission.Looks like the dismal show of support received by  Najib has failed to teach the  his cronies a thing or two about ‘eating the humble pie’., Najib has unleashed his fury against its rival, thePerkasa founder Ibrahim Ali  pact, accusing the latter of misleading the Malayst into thinking that BN’s dominant arm Umno is a racist party out to sabotage the welfare of the non-Malays.

 Although Pertubuhan Pribumi Perkasa Malaysia (Perkasa) founder Ibrahim Ali has taken a break from politics following his defeat in Kelantan, the NGO is not planning to fall off the socio-political radar.

In fact Perkasa is awaiting the formation of the cabinet before deciding its next move. Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak will announce his new cabinet later today.

Said Perkasa’s secretary Syed Hassan Syed Ali: “Right now we have no direction.

“However we are awaiting the formation of the (federal) cabinet. We will monitor the political situation in the country and steer the party accordingly.”

He said that Ibrahim was on leave until Perkasa’s AGM. The AGM is reportedly in December.

“Ibrahim is taking a break from the party politics and is expected to perform his Haj in Mekkah. He is on leave until the AGM,” said Syed Hassan.

Syed Hassan said that currently Perkasa was being steered by its vice-president Zulkifli Nordin.

Both Ibrahim and Zulkifli contested and lost in Kelantan and Selangor respectively.

Ibrahim defended his Pasir Mas parliamentary seat as an independent. He contested against PAS’ Nik Abduh Nik Abdul Aziz in a straight fight after Umno candidate Che Johan Che Pa pulled a stunt and failed to submit his nomination on April 20. Ibrahim lost to Nik Abdul by 8,047 votes.

Unstoppable Perkasa

Zulkifli meanwhile contested the Shah Alam parliamentary seat as a Barisan Nasional direct candidate with the blessing of Umno president Najib.

Zulkifli, who recently stirred the ire of Malaysia’s predominantly Hindu-Indian community by belittling Hinduism, lost to PAS’ Khalid Samad.

Reacting to the loss of its two ‘warlords’, Syed Hassan said the “defeats will not stop Perkasa from further serving the community”.

Perkasa was formed in the aftermath of the 12th general election in 2008 and has earned the wrath of non-Muslims with its racial attacks against the Chinese and Indians.

Earlier this year Ibrahim also called for the Bible to be burnt, fueling further angst against the ruling Barisan Nasional.

Although BN won the May 5 general election roping in 133 seats against opposition Pakatan Rakyat 89 parliamentary seats, it however lost on popular votes. Popular vote for Pakatan exceeded 51% against Umno-BN’s 47%.

it seems that there is official sanction to cheating no amount of precautions will help you. Because they have the law on their side, and we appear to have caved in, or are simply too weighed down

I have to address you as the Interim Prime Minister as you are really standing on shaky grounds.  Some say you may not even last till the end of this year.

Why are you the Interim Prime Minister?  Five reasons. Firstly, the majority of Malaysians want you out along with your party and their bag carriers, MCA , Gerakan and MIC.  You have only obtained 45 % of the votes inclusive of some add ons . At least two of your bag carriers will soon be no more.  So you may need some recently ‘ made ‘ citizens to carry your bags.

Secondly, your own party, Umno is crying for your head. You gave so much money to the Malaysian Chinese and got eggs thrown at your face. Your poor reading what makes Malaysians tick has got you into trouble.

Imagine thinking that Psy can get us to ‘gangdum style’ with you. Free food , ang pow and last minute donations to temples and Chinese schools cannot buy the Chinese votes. Time and time again, these have been proven. Who are your strategists by the way? They must have got their degrees from fake universities.  Sacked all of them! I truly cannot believe you are that stupid!

Thirdly, a defection of several BN candidates may swing the Federal government to the Opposition. This is not desirable but will make you at least, the Opposition head, if your party members do not throw you into the ocean by then. If this happens, I hope the Opposition when they form the government, will delineate a fair boundary for all and then call for fresh elections.

Fourth, which is not likely, people’s power will force you out! Remember, more than 55% of the people voted against your party and they want you out.

Lastly, Act of God forces you to resign.

Will I change my mind and vote for you.YES! These are what you need to do first:

Disband parties based on racial lines. Do it for Umno first and rest will follow. After all, you have no support in Umno now, so might as well get the MCA, MIC, Gerakan and all the other BN parties to support you. Firstly, whether you can get Umno to change is another matter. Then only will we will have a PM voted by all races.

2 Strongly and seriously curb corruption. MACC must be independent and report to a Royal Commission with full powers to investigate fairly and punish severely.

3 Uplift our education standards with more opportunities for enrolment to public Universities based on merit. More scholarships for the poor to pursue higher studies.

Act against all and not just selected opposition members for racist comments.Even the Malays have enough of your Perkasa morons who should be banished into the jungles and let them form their party with monkeys as their members. You can also include the Editors of Utusan. How on Earth did you think that the Cowboy (he hates Indians) Zul can win in Shah Alam is beyond me. Are you from a different planet ?

5 Creating business opportunities is one thing but giving all the chance to gain from them is another. Award tenders fairly and only to those with know how instead of those who knows who.

Mr Interim PM, just do these five things and I am sure you will achieve more than 70% votes. If not, you will soon join Benitez (Interim Chelsea Manager) seeking pasture elsewhere.

The greatest fear of the Singapore government is a Malaysia that is better governed and less corrupt. The extraordinary events in Malaysia over the past few years, plus the courageous stand of her citizens in the last few days, has been closely monitored from across the causeway.

If the infection spreads, the pent up feelings of Singaporeans may be unleashed. The two nations have a shared history.

The biggest irony of our times is that people perceive all politicians as ‘thieves’ but at the same time they are also forced to elect them  to Parliament again and again to rule the country.  And, these ‘thieves’ pick up people similar to them from all walks of life and every profession to build a nexus they need to loot the country. Do we have any choice as expected, the  Najib is putting all the blame of corruption under UMNO The question is whether people will actually believe that Najib unaware of whatever happened under Mahathir? Can anything move in the party and the government without Najib’s  approval?

najib-lee-putrajaya

Singapore may be a first world nation, but when it comes to an outpouring of feelings, the Singaporeans still look up to their cousins in Malaysia.

Dictatorship could be described as the new democracy in our neck of the woods; UMNO Baru’s Najib Abdul Razak together with his Singaporean counterpart, Lee Hsien Loong, have every reason to be rattled by the ‘Anwar Ibrahim phenomenon’.

Not since independence has Malaysia been rocked by a political force which has captured the rakyat’s sense of frustration at the nation’s existing archaic order.

The older generation are weary of the wanton waste of resources, the lack of discipline shown by its leaders and the disintegration of society. The young yearn for a new order where their contributions are acknowledged, where everyone is treated as equals and where they are rewarded for hard work, rather than their connections or lineage.

NONEAnwar has articulated their needs and galvanised the rakyat into action. Two weeks ago, some Malaysians residing in Singapore were cautioned by the Singapore Police for reminding Malaysians to return home to vote. A few days ago, some were arrested in Merlion Park for protesting about the fraud perpetrated during GE13. The Singaporean government does not like its citizens to have a mind of their own.

Najib wants Malaysia to be “the best democracy in the world”, but the hallmarks of his version of democracy are cheating, intimidation and bribery. In Singapore, the authorities also intimidate and take legal action against anyone who dares besmirch the characters of its leaders.

In Malaysia, insecure Malays reject the DAP because of the implied threat that Malaysia will be swallowed up by Singapore. Their fears are enhanced by some Chinese Malaysians, who look up to an idealised version of Singapore. Singapore absorbed many of them into learning institutions, gave them scholarships and jobs. These Malaysians forget that the price paid for Singapore’s transformation into a first world nation has been high.

‘Soulless inhabitants’

What use are towers that reach up to the sky when deep down, its inhabitants lack a soul?  Children suffer from mental health issues because of academic pressures. Adults complain of a poor work-life balance. Many Singaporeans are unhappy and a number of them have migrated.

When Anwar held a talk at the London School of Economics a few years ago, the event was oversubscribed and several hundred participants were accommodated in an adjoining lecture theatre to listen to him via video link.

The audience were mainly young adults in their early twenties, but the most amazing thing, was that a sizeable proportion were Singaporeans.

Many people disagreed with me, when in an article, I mentioned the possibility that Singapore feared a strong, successful and less corrupt Malaysia, and that the People’s Action Party (PAP) would prefer UMNO Baru to govern Malaysia, rather than an Anwar-led administration.

Without a doubt, Singapore is clean, its public transport is efficient, the entertainment and the promotion of the arts is good, English is widely spoken, it is very safe, local and international cuisines are easily available, and the island state is an important international transport hub.

In many ways, Singapore is like Malaysia. Both have state-controlled media, its Armed forces are dominated by one race, and they are ruled by autocratic governments. The cost of living is high, housing and car ownership are expensive.

Both Malaysia’s UMNO Baru government and the Singapore PAP have alienated themselves from the population.

LKYAlthough change is within the grasp of the ordinary Malaysian, change in the near future is only a dream for many Singaporeans. Wasn’t it Lee Kuan Yew (left) who once said, “…I spent a whole lifetime building this, and as long as I am in charge, nobody is going to knock it down.”

Like Dr Mahathir Mohamad, will Lee ever relinquish his hold on the island?

Last month’s Global Witness exposé highlighted the flip-side of the financial world of Singapore. It appears that dodgy South-East Asian governments and drug barons find Singapore a convenient place to launder money.

To add to Singapore’s woes, there are the worldwide syndicated football rigging and sex scandals which have rocked the world.  Only the naive would think that corruption does not exist in Singapore – they are simply better at concealing their underhanded practices. An acquaintance who handled the Malaysian side of business for a Singapore firm, alleged that he was given a sizeable allocation to sweeten any business deals in Malaysia.

NONEThe Singaporeans like to project a clean image, but it is the Malaysians who gets the bad  reputation.

The government of Singapore is concerned by the moral awakening in their people, but they fear most the economic repercussions if UMNO Baru were to be replaced. If Anwar’s administration gave Malaysians meritocracy, and excellent learning institutions were open to all, the majority of Malaysians would not need to go to Singapore to study.

No more brain drain?

There are tales of children being woken up at 4am to travel to Singapore to go to school because their parents could not enrol them in a local Malaysian school. Bright children are deprived of scholarships because they belong to the wrong race or religion. Families are broken up when some family members moved to Singapore for employment.

Singapore has every right to be scared if UMNO Baru were ousted. The brain drain would stop. If working conditions in Malaysia were improved, the daily migration of workers to Singapore would be stemmed and Singapore might suffer a shortage of workers. If corruption was reduced, Malaysia would attract more foreign investment.

The feeling of xenophobia is high in Singapore, and is mostly directed at the Chinese from the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Singaporeans consider them to be loud, brash, arrogant and lacking in culture. They are wary of their government’s desire to attract more people from the PRC to increase the dwindling population, to take care of the elderly and to bolster the economy.

The recent wave of xenophobia in Malaysia was generated by UMNO Baru because it gave away identity cards (ICs) to foreigners – like the Filipinos and Indonesians – in exchange for votes to stay in power.

Leaders in UMNO Baru have lost valuable Malaysian land to the Singaporeans, such as the Pedra Banca island off Johor and the land swap deal involving Keretapi Tanah Melayu (KTM) land in Singapore.

To increase their land mass, Singaporeans have obtained sand from Malaysia, through legal and illegal means. The buying power of the Singapore currency means that they can buy property cheaply in Malaysia and in some places, have priced the locals out of the housing market.

The Haven 01

In Ipoh, Singaporeans have built skyscrapers beside limestone hills and many locals fear that this has set a precedent and before long, the natural beauty of Ipoh will be marred forever. The Perak UMNO Baru seem oblivious to the concerns of the locals.

A clean and efficient government can improve our economy, but UMNO Baru will continue to hamper our progress. Without cronyism and corruption, Malaysia will emerge a stronger, richer nation, no longer the poor relation of Singapore.



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