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Pilihanraya Sarawak 2011 : Barisan Nasional menang majoriti 2/3
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kalau ko tak tahu undang undang citizenship australia before 1986 ... baik diam saja ...
Magika Post at 12-4-2011 15:52
Meh explain sikit... Oz neh mmg bagi kerakyatan pada mana2 org yg x apply ye? Free2 gitu? Dlm donia ni, ada negara yg boleh pegang pelbagai kerakyatan negara?? Ker ngko ni pengundi hantu kat sana?? |
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Reply 880# kecimpret
Tunisia & Mesir pon dah mengorak langkah berubah... Better dok kat Zimbabwe atau Congo lah kot... |
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Reply 883# Magika
Kalau dah lahir kat sana, cemana plak hang dpt kerakyatan Mesia?? Mesia allow ke kerakyatan 2 negara?? :re: |
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tengok la pembangkang dia cmana... pembangkang dia sungguh berkualiti ... tak was was nak ...
Magika Post at 12-4-2011 16:09
adakah ko gak ckp yg khalid ibrahim lg teruk dr khir toyo??..LGE lg worst dr tsu koon??..majoriti penduduk di 2 negeri ni konfom x bersetuju...bila dlm pala hotak dah negatif seblom beri ape2 peluang,mmg x leh ckp pape laaa:re: :re: |
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Post Last Edit by Manami at 12-4-2011 16:17
Reply 888# Magika
Atau ngko neh PENGUNDI HANTU kat mesia???
Any person holding Malaysian citizenship is also disallowed to hold any other country's citizenship. Malaysia does not allow dual citizenship. - Malaysian nationality law
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Reply Magika
Atau ngko neh PENGUNDI HANTU kat mesia???
Manami Post at 12-4-2011 16:16
ko ni tak faham kot...
aku lahir di australia tahun 1986... aku australian citizen by birth..
lepas tu mak pak aku bawa pulang ke malaysia.. dan aku jadila malaysian..
dapat birth certifiate.. dapat ic..
jadi practically aku membesar di malaysia .. dan bila aku umur 19 tahun.. aku kembali ke australia ... dan aku terus tinggal di sini ..
no problem ...
immigration malaysia pun tak tahu ...
cuma nak balik malaysia... aku tak boleh amik direct flight ke kuala lumpur la....
aku mesti balik ikut singapore or thailand ...
supaya dapat cop dekat passport keluar masuk ....
itu saja... |
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Post Last Edit by Manami at 12-4-2011 16:54
Reply 890# Magika
Kira ngko nak maksodkan, yg Mesia ni terlalu loose dlm implementkan satu undang2 lah kan?? Dlm Nationality laws kat Mesia jelas tak dibenarkan satu warganegara Mesia (yg ada IC biru lahkan) punyai 2 citizenship... Makna kata, kalau didapati ada kerakyatan negara asing, otometik akan terbatal taraf kerakyatan Mesia... No wonder ramai pengundi hantu kat Mesia.. betapa mudahnya nak dpt kerakyatan & IC Mesia... Siapa yg perintah?? Yg hampeh dlm penguat-kuasaan undang2 , pemimpin/parti yg hang junjung ke hulu ke hilir lah kan sapa lagi?? Tu lagi mau terus dikekalkan sbg pemerintah? What the heck?? :@ |
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the star
Holding on to the ‘fixed deposit’
CERITALAH by KARIM RASLAN
The Sarawak polls represent a preview of what’s to come – it is likely that BN will win these polls comfortably.
LAST year I visited Sabah and Sarawak twice, and wrote five columns about the two states. Indeed, much of what I’m going to say today is drawn from my earlier columns; there are times when you have to repeat yourself.
The trips themselves were eye-opening.
Kota Kinabalu was buzzing and laid-back while Sibu had it’s neatly maintained dynamism.
Premier guidance: Najib is leading the charge in Sarawak polls which poses a tough fight for urban vote.
However, Kuching with all its ugly official buildings felt pompous and off-putting.
Still, my Sarawak jaunts prompted me to write about the fundamental paradox of governance in Malaysia — namely that the more prosperous, urban communities are less likely to vote Barisan Nasional — leaving the coalition dependant on its rural support base.
In short, urban Malaysians of all races — the biggest beneficiaries of BN’s leadership — have become its toughest critics, and our cities are now full of querulous and demanding voters.
Well, the upcoming Sarawak elections are essentially about this paradox.
Can BN run two different campaigns; persuading urban voters of their commitment to transformation while handing out goodies to the rural population?
Part of the problem is that BN’s cadres are only familiar with developmental politics — winning by promising projects.
All too often, they are ill-prepared to argue their case against the Opposition directly.
For example, apart from the Shabery Chik-Anwar Ibrahim debate back in 2008, I’ve rarely seen our politicians debating in public.
This must change especially with the advent of Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.
There’s no doubt that he’d be a formidable debating opponent for Anwar and most Malaysians are itching for such a match-up in the next general election.
While the Sarawak polls represent a preview of what’s to come, it is likely that BN will win these polls comfortably — because of the large number of rural seats.
However, the real issue is indeed whether or not BN will retain its two-thirds majority.
Here’s the crux: urban Malaysians in Sarawak and elsewhere are no longer dependent on BN for basic amenities like water or electricity.
Many now work in the private sector and so don’t need state largesse.
Because of this, they’re able to exist independently from the BN patronage machine that their parents relied upon.
Educated and well-informed, they have started questioning BN’s style of governance.
They deplore the controversial use of public funds and want greater transparency.
The same dilemma is slowly emerging in Sarawak.
Take Sibu again, for example. As we all know, the city’s voters rejected BN in spectacular fashion at the by-election last year despite Najib’s charm offensive.
This was a calculated, considered move by Sibu’s predominantly Foochow Chinese community, who knew they could manage without government assistance.
However, the same is not true of the small longhouse communities outside the city. The disparities are stark.
Roads shrink and eventually disappear in rural Sarawak. Running water is also a major problem — especially during the dry season.
Many of the longhouses must rely on large water tanks and rain-water traps to survive.
In certain cases, the local rivers have become polluted by the industrial-scale use of fertilisers in nearby plantations, or pig farming.
Difficulties in enforcing Native Customary Rights also often result in the dislocation of these communities. This haphazard access to public utilities and property rights have made rural Sarawakians dependent on developmental politics.
Here, it is mostly about the basic necessities.
Sarawak’s rural poor realise that only the state government of the day can help them, hence they continue voting for BN.
Therein lies the contradiction for BN: providing these services would mean an inevitable loss of rural support.
As a consequence, Sarawak’s uneven development reinforces BN control, with rural communities wary of challenging authority.
As I’ve said before, development is not a reward, it is a right.
The political cost will be great but BN has no choice if it really cares for the rakyat; we simply cannot go on like this.
But with Najib unprecedentedly leading the charge in Sarawak, the game is definitely on.
The stakes are certainly very high. Whatever the case, let’s hope the people of Sarawak get a better deal. |
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sibok plak anak_utara mempromosikan diri kat sini......bukak blog sendiri la woi citer ko lahir kat mana semua....ni thread psl pilihanraya serawak la dol..... |
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tak yah balik langsung kat mesia pon tak pe |
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BN kene menang besar kat swak
talian hayat ni |
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Thousands are currently at the PR Miri ceramah! |
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War of the dynasties in the Taib family?
Posted on April 12, 2011 by malaysiakinicom
Apr 12, 11 5:12pm
The Taib Mahmud family is purportedly facing a crisis of dynastic proportions as insiders and figures close to them claim an attempted takeover is underway by ‘outsiders’ in the form of the chief minister’s sister and his in-laws.
According to whistleblower website Sarawak Report (SR), Chief Minister Taib’s close relatives had sent it a “dossier of astonishing information” that explain the move by former deputy education minister and Taib’s own cousin, Salleh Jafarruden, to contest Sarawak’s chief minister of 30 years for the seat of Balingian.
The dossier, said SR, makes clear that a faction within the Mahmud family fear the prospects of a takeover of control by a tightly-knit ‘cabal’ led by Taib’s sister Raziah (left) and her husband Robert Geneid.
This, SR claimed further, is what prompted former deputy education minister – the chief minister’s own cousin – Salleh Jafarruden to contest Taib in the latter’s stronghold of Balingian.
The dossier of information allegedly disclosed that Jafarruden had actually written to Taib three letters advising him about the “increasingly destructive influence” that Raziah, Robert and a ‘bomoh’ named ‘Stella’ are exercising over the chief minister to satisfy their “greed” for power and wealth.
The visible degeneration of the sick and elderly Taib allegedly parallel not only Raziah and Robert’s increased control over Taib – “particularly since the death of his first wife Laila in early 2009″ – but also over Sarawak’s land and companies.
His recent marriage to a young Lebanese national, Ragad Waleed, is also allegedly part of the plan as to ensure the Geneids maintain a close watch on Taib.
Ragad (right) is said to be a “direct relative” of Robert Geneid.
This is how, claimed the insiders, the Geneid couple and the witchdoctor – whose real name is Kharleen Tashman – have accumulated billions in profit, SR said.
“He [Salleh] was a gentleman opponent who actually wanted to advise Pehin Taib that he was most prepared to assist him in minimising some of the damage arising from the greed by people like Raziah and her husband.
“Of course he never received any response to the letters he sent to Taib”, said SR. Impending disaster Sensing the decay and impending disaster that has surrounded the BN campaign and the danger and increasing damage to Sarawak if the Geneid couple succeed in acquiring total control over the reins of the state, Salleh was “forced” to contest against Taib for the seat of Balingian.
“Salleh… realised the growing danger of the people surrounding Taib and the increasing damage to Sarawak if things continue unabated and remained uncorrected. Greed and bomoh are a very lethal combination to any leader,” said SR in reference to alleged witchdoctor Stella.
“Salleh decided to fight Taib only after he realised there is no way any concerned rakyat or family members can make Taib listen,” said SR, citing the dossier:
“Very concerned about the increasing destructive influence of Raziah, her husband Robert Geneid and their Black Bomoh Stella, (right).
“Compounding the issue is the Lebanese Bomoh who is a cousin of Robert Geneid and she lives in Raziah’s house within Pehin Taib’s residence as her second home. Salleh and his emissary simply intended to help salvage the situation from deteriorating further.
“[But], because Taib was heavily influenced by Raziah, her husband and their bomoh, Taib simply chucked aside any advice”.
‘Trio decided S’wak BN candidates
Among the proofs of their immense influence on matters of the state, said SR, is a paper entitled ‘Datuk Raziah’s Bomoh List of BN Candidates’, which purports to show that Sarawak BN’s candidates for this Saturday’s state-wide polls were actually decided by the trio.
This is a great pity, SR cited the document as saying, because the candidates were not chosen primarily based on their ability and their performance during their years of service as legislators or to keep hold of and protect BN’s huge tracts of land and other possessions.
“Among the candidates criticised by the insider are the candidate for Tupong, Daud Abdul Rahman and for Lambir, Ripin Lambat. The author of the dossier confirms the rumours that the candidate list was vetted by Stella, which created last minute delays,” said SR.
“It is also claimed that “Semoi Peri, who had already expressed her wish not to stand, was pressured to stand again for reasons known to Raziah’s Bomoh.
“Datuk Zul Philip, candidate for Jepak was not expected to be chosen, but somehow his name was confirmed to stand by the Raziah Bomoh list. All these years he is one candidate who has never failed to show his face close with Pehin and Raziah”.
The document suggests that the Geneids’ plans stand opposed to the interests even of Taib’s Cahya Mata Sarawak, PPES group of companies and his son, Mahmud Abu Bekir (right) and Mahmud’s nominee and partner, Chris Chung.
“Don’t they too have a strong reason to want to make sure the selected BN candidates will protect what they had grabbed throughout these years?” asked the document.
According to SR, furthermore, the Geneids are putting into place plans to ensure that current Minister of Planning, Amar Tengah Awang Tengah, takes over from Taib.
“Awang is commonly known to be at Dato Raziah’s beck and call whenever she wants something from the State Government,” SR said citing the document.
“Little wonder, therefore that Dato Amar Awang Tengah was the only one privy to the meeting with them hours before Taib appeared at the PBB HQ for the state election candidates list announcement,” it added. |
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hishamudin rais pun kempen di miri, hebat bah |
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