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Author: Acong

[Dunia] Brunei Haramkan Sambutan X'mas atau Penjara 5 tahun

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Post time 25-12-2015 10:56 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Syazzy replied at 25-12-2015 03:08 PM
In Brunei.. Christians are Allowed to Celebrate Christmas.

Berbakul cercaan kpd sultan brunei, rupanya2 larangan utk muslim sajork.

Kahkahkah

Disebabkan ummah kitab dua hanya minoriti, pasti kurang meriah sambutannya. Maka perlu bantuan ummah agama lain.

Sudah. Pergi la mintak ampun dkt sb sinun kerana memfitnah beliau. Xda rasa berdosa ke. Kitab anda cakap fitenah itu dosa besar
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:03 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
chazey replied at 25-12-2015 05:59 PM
Motif tetiba keji ekonomi, ringgit Malaysia pula?

Kena tanya Kelapaparut dulu motif dia tetiba sumpah brunei bankrupt.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:05 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
kelapaparut replied at 25-12-2015 10:41 PM
Hey, pemimpin kiteorg buat taik pun kiteorg keji,xde sape yg puji najib, sultan u pun is not maksu ...

Nak tgk tak passport i? Tak ada masuk miri tiap minggu. sudah2 lah membodohkan diri belagak pandai dan tahu every single thing about Bruneian.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:06 PM | Show all posts
Syazzy replied at 25-12-2015 11:03 PM
Kena tanya Kelapaparut dulu motif dia tetiba sumpah brunei bankrupt.

chazey tu dulu kristuan..pastu ngaku masuk islam...

tapi tetap makan babi...sebab babi daging paling sedap dalam dunia..katanya.


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Post time 25-12-2015 11:08 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
obelisk replied at 25-12-2015 10:44 PM
Christmas Celebration in Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                                                                         ...

Nice one. Thanks for Posting this. Unfortunately we have blind people around here. So its still useless to post this.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:09 PM | Show all posts
His uncle earned himself an unwanted reputation as a billionaire international playboy as a result of his lavish parties and wild excesses.
Now Prince Azim of Brunei has shown he is no slouch at entertaining either after hosting what is being hailed as the party of the year.
A joint birthday bash for the 26-year-old Prince and three of his siblings had it all: Hollywood stars, celebrity singers, one of England's finest stately homes and 6,000 white roses.
According to the local florist, the bill for flowers alone came to £70,000 – a claim disputed by aides to the Brunei Royal family.
What is not in dispute, however, is the A-list celebrities who came last weekend to Stapleford Park country house hotel in Leicestershire, which is owned by Prince Azim's mother, Mariam Aziz, the former wife of the billionaire Sultan of Brunei.
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Rubbing shoulders were Hollywood actresses such as Sophia Loren, Faye Dunaway, Ursula Andress and Joan Collins. Other guests included Jerry Hall, the model, and singers Mariah Carey and Janet Jackson.
Neither singer performed at the dinner dance, which was attended by some 230 guests. That role was left to Chaka Khan, the American singer songwriter, and Incognito, the British jazz, funk and soul band.
Younger members of the Hollywood set were also present at the party, including actors Adam Gregory, Robert Buckley and Sean Faris. "Adam Gregory was particularly popular with the some of the girls," said one source.
Vass, a Nottingham florist, said last week that 12 staff had been needed to prepare and deliver the £70,000 worth of flowers – its largest ever order – for the event. It said the order was for 6,000 white roses, as well as hundreds of pink and red roses with mint, white peonies, purple delphiniums and hydrangeas. "Everyone was walking around in their finery," said Keith Murphy, who runs the florist.
Prinze Azim's uncle, Prince Jefri, became renowned for his lavish parties and extravagant lifestyle.
Three years ago he was accused of having spent more than £1.5 billion on himself in his final 10 years as finance minister, before he was stripped of the job in 1997.
Much of the money allegedly went on a succession of "toys": some 2,000 cars, including Ferraris, Rolls-Royces and Aston Martins; 17 aircraft, including a Comanche attack helicopter; and a 180ft yacht, the less-than-tastefully named SS Tits.
As well as having two speedboats on board – Nipple I and Nipple II – the yacht had 24-carat gold-plated fittings and lifts between the decks. Other stories emerged of his fondness for women with lifestyles as fast as his sports cars.
Last year Prince Jefri was threatened with jail after failing to appear at the High Court over a £3 billion family feud.
Prince Jefri denied acting illegally or improperly, telling The Sunday Telegraph: "I am no angel, for sure, but I have been the fall guy."
Other than Prince Azim, the three others siblings celebrating their birthdays last weekend were his brother Prince Mateen and sisters, Princesses Azemah and Fadzillah.
Prince Azim is currently the fourth in line to succeed to the throne of Brunei, the oil-rich sultanate which was given independence from Britain in 1980. The Prince was educated at Leighton Park School in Berkshire and Oxford Brookes University.
Forbes magazine recently rated him eighth in its list of "hottest young royals".
It estimated his wealth at $22 billion (£13.5 billion) and said of him: "Azim is a paparazzi favourite; rampant rumours linking him to models and celebrities claim he often pays for celebs to attend his parties and lavishes them with gifts."
Members of the Brunei Royal family are sensitive to not wanting to be seen to put on obscenely expensive parties, particularly during a recession.
Jeff Allen, the spokesman for Prince Azim, yesterday dismissed the florist's £70,000 figure as inaccurate and "crazy".
The spokesman denied rumours that some of the celebrities had been paid to attend the event, but he confirmed that some guests had been given free air fares – premier or upper class seats, rather than first class.
The spokesman described the event as a "family party" and denied that it was wasteful.
He declined to estimate how much the party cost but said: "It was a great party and everyone went home happy. The only extravagance was the venue itself."
Sources close to the Sultan of Brunei, who has 12 children by three wives, stressed this weekend that he did not attend the party, and he had nothing to do with organising it – or picking up the bill for the event.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ ... ty-of-the-year.html

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Post time 25-12-2015 11:11 PM | Show all posts
http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1130338


Prince Azim is the Sultan of Brunei's uber gay son. I think you can guess which one he is in these pictures. The world waits to see if under sharia law, what is good for the people is good for the royal family. Time will tell.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:17 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Edited by taikor at 25-12-2015 11:19 PM

apa ni stok2 Brunei mai nak buat spin kat sini. macam lah kita tak paham kristian masih boleh sambut krismas kat Brunei.

ISUNYA ialah tidak boleh tunjuk kat public dan decoration pun tak boleh. stakat kedai2 jual decorations boleh. tapi kalo kedai dah decorate tema krismas, siap lah kena bahana puak Bolkiah. kena main sorok2
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:23 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Tq for info about prince Azim.
Meanwhile, old testament jua melarang habit menjadi gay dan boleh dihukum rejam dgn batu.what a coincidence .

But that doesnt seemed to be inside your link of references nor followed by ummah xmas.

Teruskan la mengkaji undang2 syariah. Semoga anda dikurniakan hidayah spt ustaz hussein yee.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:27 PM | Show all posts
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/home ... British-hotels.html


Culture clash . . . bans on festivities in homeland, while guests in hotel chain pay out for Xmas treats
THE Sultan of Brunei is coining it in from festive celebrations at his luxury UK hotel chain — despite banning Christmas in his homeland.

Any Muslim caught sending cards, putting up decorations or singing carols in the oil-rich sovereign state risks five years in jail.

Yet the Sultan’s Dorchester Collection hotels are happy to milk the Christmas trade.

The billionaire Sultan’s Dorchester on London’s Park Lane offers £69-a-head “Christmas Carols Afternoon Tea”.

And his 45 Park Lane has a “cool yule” in its Studio Suites from £904 per night for two.

In Brunei, south-east Asia, non-Muslims can mark Christmas in private.

Officials say open celebrations could “damage the beliefs of the Muslim community”.

But some are risking jail by posting festive pics as part of the #MyTreedom religious freedom campaign.
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, 69, introduced the Christmas ban in 2014.

Brunei also adopted a stricter penal code, including amputations and stoning.

Even before that, gay people risked ten years behind bars.

That triggered a Dorchester boycott backed by celebs including Stephen Fry, Stella McCartney and Sir Richard Branson.

A Dorchester Collection spokesman said last night: “We follow the laws of the land in which our hotels are based.”
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:33 PM | Show all posts
Bloody hypocritical Sultan.

Freedom of worship and celebrating of our religion is a constitutional in our Constitution. By sing along and wishing somebody Merry Christmas does not change a person's faith overnight, unless you are so weak and have no confident of your religion.. Muslim prays 5 times a day and surely they are and would not change their religion by just a Greeting. That's ridiculous and an insult to the intelligence of the people. We should be looking forward to mix and mingle with each others to foster unity amongst the rakyat instead of dividing them.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:36 PM | Show all posts
The governments of three countries – Somalia, Tajikistan and Brunei – have banned Christmas celebrations this year, with punishments ranging up to a five-year jail term.

Somalia issued a ban on Christmas and New Year’s celebrations in the Muslim country on Wednesday, saying the festivities “have nothing to do with Islam”.

“We warn against celebration of Christmas, which is only for Christians,” Sheikh Mohamed Kheyrow, director of Somalia’s ministry of religion, said on state radio. “This is a matter of faith. The Christmas holiday and its drum beatings have nothing to do with Islam.” He said the ministry has sent letters to the police, national security intelligence and officials in the capital Mogadishu instructing them to “prevent Christmas celebrations”.

The announcement had echoes of Islamist militants al-Shabaab, which controlled the capital Mogadishu until 2011. Among their edicts was to ban Christmas celebrations.

It was not immediately clear what prompted the government announcement. Somalia is almost entirely Muslim, but it hosts thousands of African Union (AU) peacekeepers, including from the majority-Christian countries Burundi, Uganda and Kenya. The country, which is struggling to emerge from two decades of fighting and chaos, has also seen a growing number of Somalis returning from Europe and North America, sometimes bringing foreign traditions and attitudes with them.

Officials also said that Christmas celebrations may attract attacks from the Islamist militants al-Shabaab.

“Christmas will not be celebrated in Somalia for two reasons; all Somalis are Muslims and there is no Christian community here. The other reason is for security,” Abdifatah Halane, spokesman for Mogadishu mayor, told Reuters. “Christmas is for Christians. Not for Muslims.”

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Last 25 December, al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for an attack on the main AU base in Mogadishu, which lasted several hours and left three peacekeepers and a civilian contractor dead.

The majority Muslim but nominally secular central Asian republic of Tajikistan has also issued its toughest-ever ban on seasonal celebrations, banning Christmas trees and gift-giving in schools.

The country has been cracking down on Christmas and New Year’s in recent years, and banned Father Frost – Russia’s equivalent of Santa Claus – from television screens in 2013. Halloween celebrations in the capital, Dushanbe, have also been targeted by police, with revellers dressed as zombies and vampires reportedly being detained in 2013 and 2014.

The oil-rich sultanate of Brunei, has also banned Christmas celebrations, under a shift towards hardline Islamic law. Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, one of the world’s richest men, announced last year he would push ahead with the introduction of sharia law, eventually including tough penalties such as death by stoning or severed limbs.

Religious leaders in the sultanate warned this month that a ban on Christmas would be strictly enforced, for fear that Muslims could be led astray. “Using religious symbols like crosses, lighting candles, putting up Christmas trees, singing religious songs, sending Christmas greetings … are against Islamic faith,” imams said in sermons published in the local press.

Punishment for violating the ban is a five-year jail sentence, and the government warned last year that Muslims would be committing an offence if they so much as wore “hats or clothes that resemble Santa Claus”.

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Although Christians are free to celebrate, they have been told not to do so “excessively and openly”, in a directive that has had a chilling effect on the south-east Asian nation, which sits on a corner of Borneo island.

Businesses have been warned to take decorations down and authorities have stepped up spot checks across the capital. Hotels popular among western tourists that once boasted dazzling lights and giant Christmas trees are now barren of festive decor. “This will be the saddest Christmas ever for me,” a Malaysian expatriate resident told AFP, requesting not to be named for fear of reprisals from authorities. “The best part of Christmas Day is waking up and having that feeling that it is Christmas, but there’s just none of that here and you just feel deprived.

“All this is just because of what the sultan wants. In 2013, I saw many Muslims together with Christians having a good time at their house parties. Everything was normal and good,” he said.

Most people are too scared to speak up about the ban, and while some privately gripe about the rule they know there is little to be done. “I will be working on Christmas after church. We just have to cope,” a Filipino waitress – one of Brunei’s many guest workers – said.

Some people dared to post pictures on social media depicting Christmas cheer using the hashtag #MyTreedom, part of a global campaign to highlight oppression against Christians. At least one church in the capital sported decorations that were visible from the street, a rare glimpse of holiday cheer in the otherwise decoration-free city.

“The ban is ridiculous. It projects this image that Islam does not respect the rights of other religions to celebrate their faith,” said a Muslim mother in the capital, also too scared to provide her name. “Islam teaches us to respect one another and I believe it starts with respecting other religions even if what is being banned are ornamental displays.”

Others were more tempered, and urged the prohibition to be respected. “It is an Islamic country and so with respect to the law, churches need to keep decorations indoors,” said a Christian Bruneian, unfazed by the strict rules. “The meaning of Christmas for us isn’t all about Christmas decorations.”

However, the prohibition does not extend to the business interests of the sultan, whose estimated $20bn fortune includes the historic Beverly Hills Hotel – part of his Dorchester Collection with branches in London, Paris, Milan and Rome.

It is Christmas as usual this year in the upscale Le Richemond hotel in Geneva where guests are greeted by lavish displays in the hotel lobby, include bowls overflowing with pine branches, ornaments and candles aplenty. The Le Meurice hotel in Paris advertises a Christmas eve seven-course gourmet menu for
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:37 PM | Show all posts
for the moron who was proudly posting #mytreedom comment.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:44 PM | Show all posts
nirman replied at 25-12-2015 11:37 PM
for the moron who was proudly posting #mytreedom comment.

Oh, rupanya komen dari my treedom yang forumner apa tah nama sebok pasal Somalia bagai itu bersifat rebellion.
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Post time 25-12-2015 11:49 PM | Show all posts
However, the prohibition does not extend to the business interests of the sultan, whose estimated $20bn fortune includes the historic Beverly Hills Hotel – part of his Dorchester Collection with branches in London, Paris, Milan and Rome.

It is Christmas as usual this year in the upscale Le Richemond hotel in Geneva where guests are greeted by lavish displays in the hotel lobby, include bowls overflowing with pine branches, ornaments and candles aplenty. The Le Meurice hotel in Paris advertises a Christmas eve seven-course gourmet menu for


Hipokrit nak mampos sultan kebangga Brunai ini.
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 Author| Post time 26-12-2015 03:49 AM | Show all posts
HannahMontana replied at 25-12-2015 10:09 AM
gang pelahap biawak makan biawak free , kerajaan beri subsidi atau tidak , dia xsedar pun

...

hai taliban wannabe..... bila nak pi bom topekong?   




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 Author| Post time 26-12-2015 03:56 AM | Show all posts
hayrin86 replied at 25-12-2015 08:46 AM
Bukan setakat Tahun Baru Cina saja, Maldives pun haramkan Hari Pekerja 1 Mei setiap tahun macam di ...

hari buruh = hari keraian kuli batak   
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 Author| Post time 26-12-2015 03:59 AM | Show all posts
Syazzy replied at 25-12-2015 09:19 AM
Adui kesian lah chinese.. LoL..

Oh Somalia banned Christmas. Mengamuk sakan lah lagi Christians ...

apasal kena kesian kat cina?   
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Post time 26-12-2015 05:03 AM | Show all posts
Syazzy replied at 25-12-2015 03:54 PM
Tak..maksud aku.. Ummah islam mcm uols yang make a havoc sebab tak dapat celebrate christmas kat B ...

mcm mana uols punya pengiraan currency ni? kalau BND 1 = RM3.03, means RM 1 = BND 30 sen gitu kot. melampau benar 0.003 tu.
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Post time 26-12-2015 08:57 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
sume org tau krismas leh disambut di brunei..yg jd isu skg ni ia x leh disambut secara terbuka...mall x leh decorate krismas,hotel x leh taruk pokok krismas kat lobi..yg buat lebih lawak alasan utk haramkan sambutan krismas secara terbuka ni
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