Friday, December 23, 2011

Khir Toyo: What sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander

Hantu Laut

Interesting! Khir Toyo getting only one year for the magnitude of his crime as compared to former immigration deputy director-general Yusof Abu Bakar who was sentenced to a total of 56 years and fined RM620,000 on 14 counts of corruption.

All forms of corruption are wrong and should not be tolerated but I believe the severity of the punishment should reflect the severity of the crime.

In the case of Yusof, not only corruption the root of his problem, but he has also, by his action, endangered national security by allowing aliens easy access to this country.

Though the sentences were to run concurrently Yusof would still have to serve minimum 0f 6 years in prison. The core of his case was RM121,500 he took from a businessman who wanted to bring a number of Chinese nationals, presumably, China Dolls for the purpose of prostitution.

There have also been cases of shoplifters getting 2 to 3 years imprisonment for first offence and amount so small, as a layman, it's just perplexing and too confusing to understand our justice system, or was it different strokes for different folks, the rabble deserves heavier penalty even for petty larceny.

It would be interesting to see what awaits Khir Toyo when his appeal came up for hearing.


Thursday, December 15, 2011

Malaysia's Mahathir Defends Sarawak Chieftain


Charges of looting Sarawak could just be electioneering, he says

Malaysia’s former Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad, has defended Sarawak’s embattled chief minister, Abdul Taib Mahmud, questioning calls by international NGOs for investigations of Taib’s vast fortune.

"When an election is near, you get funny things like this coming out," Mahathir told reporters at a press conference Tuesday. "If it is just a political game to try and undermine somebody's political image then I think it is not right."

If the allegations are true, the 86-year-old Mahathir said, the authorities could be expected to take action. In May, Swiss authorities announced they were investigating accounts held in Swiss banks by the Taib family for evidence of corruption. Shortly after that, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission announced it would also investigate Taib’s holdings, although observers in Kuala Lumpur said it was unlikely that the MACC would follow through, Indeed, one source told Asia Sentinel recently that the investigation had “gone cold.” A Taib spokesman said the funds had been legitimately deposited and that there was no evidence of criminality.

Many political observers expect Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to call national elections in the early part of 2012, possibly in March. Sarawak, the country’s largest state, is key to efforts by the Barisan Nasional, the country’s ruling national coalition, to maintain a healthy majority in parliament. Both Najib and Mahathir earlier this year reportedly tried to dissuade the scandal-ridden chief minister to quit before state elections.

When Taib refused to step down, both had to criss-cross the state, campaigning for Taib’s coalition. However, the coalition produced a two-thirds majority in the state assembly. Although he had publicly offered to step down, the magnitude of the victory impelled him to stay in power.

Mahathir’s defense of Taib was generated by the fact that on Tuesday, NGOs from six different countries issued a joint letter demanding that Malaysia’s sultan appoint a royal commission of inquiry and that authorities arrest and prosecute Taib and 13 members of his family for massive fraud, theft, corruption, illegal appropriation of land and abuse of public office. They allege that the looting of Sarawak’s rich timber and other natural resources has earned Taib’s family billions of US dollars through investment in as many as 400 companies in 25 countries.

They also demanded that a multi-agency task force be appointed to attempt to repatriate the vast sums from other countries to the people of Sarawak.

Research released earlier this month by the Switzerland-based Bruno Manser Fund said official documents show the Taib family stake in 14 Malaysian companies alone is worth US$1.46 billion. The fund has uploaded all of the documents onto the Internet. They can be found here. Billions more are believed to be held in other countries.

The fund said its research only covers publicly available information from Malaysia’s Registry of Companies and other official documents and the total of all of the Taib family’s holdings could run well in excess of that amount.

“Not counting their more hidden wealth, this puts the Taib family firmly into the category of one of the richest families in the world and makes them far richer than the Queen of England (whose assets are a mere half billion pounds),” the fund said.

In all, according to the fund, named for a Swiss environmentalist who disappeared in Sarawak in 2000 while trying to aid the Penan tribe, the family also has stakes in companies in Australia (22 companies), Bermuda (1), the British Virgin Islands (7), Brunei (1), Cambodia (1), Canada (9), the Cayman Islands (1), Fiji (3), Hong Kong (7), India (2), Indonesia (3), Jersey (1), the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (1), Labuan (1), New Zealand (5), the People’s Republic of China (2), the Philippines (1), Singapore (2), Sri Lanka (1), Thailand (2), the United Arab Emirates (1), the United Kingdom (4), the United States of America (6) and Vietnam (1).

Allegations are that as chief minister, Taib granted timber access permits to a plethora of companies, most of them owned by ethnic Chinese, that denuded much of the state of its tropical rainforest. The two NGOs previously reported that Taib's children are the shareholders and directors of numerous companies controlling residential and commercial buildings in Canada, Australia, Britain and the United States together worth hundreds of millions of US dollars. Many of the assets came into their possession when they were in their early 20s and were still college students with no visible access to legitimate resources to invest.

Taib has been chief minister, finance minister and planning and resources management minister of since 1981 and he hardly conceals his vast wealth, riding around the capital of Kuching in a cream-colored Rolls-Royce sedan.

Taib, his four children, eight siblings and his first cousin Hamed bin Sepawi have stakes in 332 companies worth several billion US dollars in Malaysia, the report says. “The Taib family’s share in 14 large companies’ net assets alone has been calculated at US$1.46 billion (RM4.6 billion). The three largest Taib family-linked companies are the 84 percent Taib-owned Cahya Mata Sarawak (net assets RM2.4 billion), the 25 percent Taib-owned Custodev Sdn Bhd (net assets RM1.6 billion) and the at least 35 percent Taib-owned Ta Ann Holdings Bhd (net assets: RM1.4 billion).
Read more.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Malaysian Winter,Money Can't Buy Me Love

Hantu Laut

Who coined the catch phrase "Arab Spring"? Nobody really know. The concoction implies that the Arabs have been sleeping all this while allowing dictatorship and injustice to dictate their existence and suddenly waking up to an unpremeditated revolution for greater democratic freedom.A kind of spontaneous combustion and wildfire.

It could have come from the European Revolution of 1848 where over 50 countries were effected by uprisings against monarchies and dictatorship.

The revolution began in France and immediately spread to most parts of Europe except for UK and Russia. It is also known as the "Spring of Nations". Similar to the "Arab Spring" there was no coherence, coordination or cooperation among the revolutionaries in different countries.The uprisings was led by ad-hoc reformers, the middle class and the proletariat. The disorganised revolutions were unable to hold together for long. Some of the countries returned to its old ways.

In the case of France, the victor, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte created the French Second Republic, but after only four years returned the country to a monarchy and dictatorship.

The Arab Spring is likely to end in a debacle similar to the European Revolutions of 1848.Egypt is clearly heading that way and the potentiality for Islamist party and extremism to fill up the power vacuum and take over control of the country.

For the Western nations that supported democratisation of the Arab countries it would become another painful reminder of what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan when they faced common enemies, they were very good friends and the West joyfully supplying war machines to the Iraqis and the Afghan Mujaheddin.

Both countries later turned against the West, particularly the US, that ended up with military occupation of both countries.

Malaysia, is on a crossroad of change, a political upheaval that have brought waves of euphoria to the oppositions and certain sector of the general population that have had enough of over half a century of what they deemed as authoritarian rule, covenanted by restrictive laws and debased by runaway corruptions.

A general elections would be held soon, possibly, anytime between January to June and will see the most intensely fought elections ever.It would be Malaysia's "Winter of Discontent."

It will be one elections that's impossible to predict, at this stage, the outcome.It is still very cloudy.The cloud would only clear up after dissolution of parliament, giving a clearer view, postulating the true political scenario.

The BN, having bigger war chest, may have better chance, but, sometimes, no matter how much you try, money can't buy love.