Sunday, February 6, 2011

Yes! Mr Specious Anwar Can Kiss Putrajaya Goodbye

Hantu Laut

"Pajudin will not last long either. The rebels will continue to demand an acceptable replacement and Pajudin is far from being acceptable to PKR statewide membership" .......extracted from my previous post "Who Is Pajudin Nordin? The Final Curtain For Sabah PKR"

"You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time." Abraham Lincoln.

Sooner or later your lies will catch up with you.

Sabah Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman (right) seen here shaking hands with ex-Sabah PKR chied Pajudin Nordin who has abandoned the Pakatan Rakyat party and joined Umno. — Bernama pic
Sabah Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman (right) seen here shaking hands with ex-Sabah PKR chied Pajudin Nordin who has abandoned the Pakatan Rakyat party and joined Umno.

Yes! Anwar can kiss Putrajaya goodbye.Story here.

Photo taken from BarkingMagpie

Only Sabahans can teach this man a lesson.

Anwar! Do us a favour, leave us Sabahans in peace, just do the right thing, close down Sabah PKR.

It's a reflection of your poor leadership.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Egypt: Dangerous games

The machinations of the Mubarak regime could yet see much more blood spilt in Cairo.

The Guardian,

Blood is not the ideal lubricant for the orderly transition which all political forces in Egypt claim to want. Nor is deceit. Yet there is a clear danger of more of both as the regime in Cairo wriggles and manoeuvres for advantage. They may understand on one level that things cannot go on as they did before, but on another, some of them at least are acting as if outflanking their opponents is the main objective. There is also evidence, in the shape of a worsening of the conditions under which foreign journalists have to work, that they want to do it without the international press at their elbow.

Much of this manoeuvring centres on the physical possession of Tahrir Square. The passionate advocates of immediate change in Egypt have already been pushed out of part of the square by violent pro-Mubarak demonstrators. Now, in addition, they face the more insidious prospect of being "persuaded" out of this symbolic place by the argument that what they are doing will lead to dire consequences for the livelihood of ordinary Egyptians.

The new prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, yesterday apologised for the violence in the square on Wednesday and said it would not be repeated. But he did so in a way which not so subtly equated the two sets of demonstrators, while laying on the anti-Mubarak side the responsibility for the deterioration in the country's economy. Vice-president Omar Suleiman did the same in an interview in which he recounted his attempts to conduct a dialogue with political parties and spoke of the length of time needed to make constitutional changes. The game here is an obvious one: paint the country as more or less equally divided and in need of arbitration and reconciliation, make economic normalisation the immediate priority, and draw out the political process.

One does not have to believe that every pro-Mubarak demonstrator is a thug or a plainclothes policeman to understand that equating the two sides in this way distorts reality. And, while arguments about Egypt's economic plight or the need to observe legalities cannot be dismissed, they are no substitute for creating the trust necessary if there are to be real negotiations about the country's future. Read more.

The Economist:The regime sends in the thugs
Maimi Herald:Egypt's Islamists, caught off guard by uprising, still defining role

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Friday, January 28, 2011

What the Fuss? It's Not CNN Investigative Report,It's A Saudi Secret Report, Mr Anwar!

Hantu Laut

Did CNN carry out the investigation using their own resources, independent, impartial and conclusively reliable ?

Was it not that CNN only read a dossier out of a secret investigation made by the Saudi government and reported accordingly.

Read the full report here.The report made an even more shocking discovery, the funneling of funds through the Muslim Brotherhood movement.

Was not Anwar linked with Yusuf Qaradawi of the Muslim Brotherhood also reported by CNN a while ago.Could the money have been funnelled through the intricate network of the Muslim Brotherhood?

Who owned the Saudi government, the people of Saudi Arabia or the Palace of Saudi Arabia?Would you take such report as gospel truth or rather take it with a pinch of salt?

So! What all the hullabaloo? Anwar screaming his head off saying it's a CNN report when it was a report by the Saudi government, literally, conducted by the royal household, which naturally placed it in a state of morbidity and doubt.

Anwar was quick to capitalise on this news from one of the most biased TV networks in the world citing a report that is as good as the paper it was written on.