Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Apple Tree
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Smooth Sailing
Azmin has slight edge in PKR polls hit by low turnout and technical glitches.
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Itching
It's just about some ordinary people trying to save some grass.
That's all I can say for now.
Meanwhile, let's welcome President Barack Hussein Obama, the 44th president of the United States to Malaysia. The three-day visit by Obama, beginning today will be his official visit to after President Lyndon Baines Johnson's visit in 1966.
US president Obama's visit to Malaysia is a recognition of its successful development efforts, said Malaysia's Special Envoy to the United States, Datuk Seri Dr Jamaluddin Jarjis - Bernama
Development should also complement animal rights, environmental and wildlife conservation. No?
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Oops!
I stumbled upon http://www.fz.com/content/kit-siang-questions-reclamation-project-pulau-ubah
and http://dapmalaysia.org/en/statements/2014/04/05/18316/
Everyone else would probably have known about this issue already.
Everything happens for a reason and I believe I was sent to a non-existent assignment for a reason.
Is our eco-system under threat?
Monday, April 21, 2014
There's Something Fishy
Friday, April 18, 2014
Iceman and an Irishman
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Group Selfie
Read more: Danga Avenue One food hub launched - Johor - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/streets/johor/danga-avenue-one-food-hub-launched-1.568859#ixzz2z3LLspIq
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Be A Responsible Pet Guardian
A flashback of our front-page report last Friday. |
Last year, the local council handled 540 complaints about stray dogs.
However, MPJBT corporate and public relations department administrative officer Salwa Abd Rashid said the NGOs had to be committed if they wished to work with the local council.
"We cannot release a dog once we have caught it, and we cannot provide any allocations. The other local councils have outsourced the work to dog catchers who, we believe, are paid as much as RM100 for the capture of one stray dog.
"MPJBT has its own team of dog catchers which consists of six men. We do not feel that we need to spend taxpayers' money by outsourcing to private dog catchers.
"Our team does not go out to look for stray dogs. We only act when there are public complaints.
"We need to take action or we will be seen as not doing our job," she added.
Salwa did not deny that carcasses of culled stray dogs were dumped into garbage bins near public markets.
"Those were roll-on roll-off (RoRo) bins, which are huge.
"We wrapped the carcasses in plastic bags before dumping them.
"We also instructed that the dogs be dumped only on days when the waste management company (SWM Environment Sdn Bhd) is coming to collect the rubbish.
"As to claims that our dog catchers shoot the dogs or clobber them to death, that is not true," she said, adding that the local council only shot crows.
Salwa said some stray dogs did get hostile in the presence of dog catchers.
However, she added, the council had yet to receive reports of stray dogs turning hostile on the public.
"If the NGOs want to work with us, please also launch a campaign to educate pet owners to be more responsible.
"Pet owners should not discard their dogs when they no longer think the dog is useful.
"If they do not want the dog anymore, they can call us to put it to sleep, instead of taking the dog somewhere far and dumping it and letting it become other people's problem," she said.
Monday, April 14, 2014
Puthandu Vazthukal
Sunday, April 13, 2014
The Best Day Ever
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Get Tested, Get Treated
Thursday, April 10, 2014
A Time For Self-Reflection
APPEAL FOR COMPASSION: The Johor Baru Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals wants to work with local councils to control the stray dog population in the city
JOHOR BAHRU: THE Johor Baru Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (JBSPCA) hopes to work with local councils to control the stray dog population in the city.
Its chairman Ranjit Singh said this after receiving complaints from the public that dogs were being killed and dumped in refuse bins in their neighbourhoods.
"We can understand that the local councils have to do something about the stray dog population, as canines in a pack can turn hostile.
"JBSPCA is appealing to the authorities to use a humane euthanisation method. We are also willing to assist the local authority in a spay programme," Ranjit said.
He said it was unethical to clobber or shoot an animal, and then put it into a plastic bag for it to die from its injuries or from lack of oxygen.
"That is a very cruel way to die," he added.
Streets checked out two garbage disposal centres -- one at Taman Universiti and another at Taman Ungku Tun Aminah -- and found that stray dogs were indeed dumped in black plastic bags.
A Taman Ungku Tun Aminah resident, who only wanted to be known as Pei, said she often heard dogs wailing in the garbage dumpster near the area's market.
"Being an animal lover, the dreadful sound of a dog crying as it breathes its last really disturbs me. I can't sleep at night," she said.
Pei claimed that the dogs were brought there in a truck and dumped.
Traders at the market in Taman Universiti, near Taman Ungku Tun Aminah, said there was a strong stench when the rubbish was not picked up on time.
"The men would come in a truck two or three times a week and dump the plastic bags containing dogs into the dumpster.
"Sometimes, some of the dogs are still alive when they dumped there," said one of the traders who declined to be named.
It is learnt that this inhumane practice has been going on for several years.
JBSPCA vice-chairman Joseph Chia said stray dogs should be put down humanely and the carcasses disposed off properly.
SWM Environment Sdn Bhd corporate communications head Shahrul Amir Abdul Rahim said the company would look into the matter. The company is in charge of waste management in the two areas.
Johor Baru Central municipal council could not be reached for comment.
Read more: 'Cull stray dogs humanely' - Johor - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/streets/johor/cull-stray-dogs-humanely-1.560512#ixzz2yXAyKEvt
Empathy and Compassion
The dumpster in Taman Universiti where the carcasses of stray dogs were put into plastic bags and dumped. Some of the dogs were not dead yet but would eventually succumb to their injuries or die from lack of oxygen.
Starting the Day
Monday, April 7, 2014
Springtime In The Tropics
Tabebuia rosea blossoming all over Malaysia. Pic by Esther Teo |
I didn't know much about this flower species until yesterday.
After doing some research, I learnt that the Tabebuia rosea aka trumpet rose tree is a tropical tree that is widely planted along city and residential streets all over Malaysia.
Johor Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) chairman Vincent Chow, in his FB site, said the tree is native to Central and South America and is popularly planted along roadsides and as a garden ornamental plant.
In Malaysia, Tabebuia is also known as the “Cherry Blossoms of Penang” after its pink flowers which are much like the cherry blossoms of Japan.
Other local nicknames for the plant include “tissue paper tree”, referring to its thin petals.
The tree is also known as ipê rosa in South American countries.
"When the wind blows, the falling white blooms give one a feeling that it is snowing,"says Vincent.
However, the time to enjoy the blooms is limited. See it before it's over!
Sunday, April 6, 2014
My "Sakura Boulevard"
Delicate petals |
Bandar Baru Uda |
Meanwhile, an excerpt of my story on the 1977 Tanjung Kupang crash. I have taken out the part where I interviewed the mother of one of the victims of the ill-fated flight. It had caused her much anguish and distress.
JOHOR BARU: Over the years, the visitors to the Tanjung Kupang memorial in Jalan Kebun Teh here have grown lesser in number.
The memorial contained the remains of the 100 people on board the ill-fated Malaysia Airlines (MAS) flight MH653 which crashed into a mangrove swamp in Tanjung Kupang near Gelang Patah here on Dec 4, 1977.
Of the 100, seven were crew members and 93 were passengers.
The crowd who visited the memorial may have lessen over time, along with the pain of those who lost their loved ones in the crash, but the memories still linger.
Abdul Latif Ahmad, 48, a businessman, was at the memorial yesterday with his wife, Bahiyah Ahmad, 46.
Bahiyah's mother lives near to the memorial site, making it convenient for the couple to visit the site regularly.
Abdul Latif Ahmad at the Tanjung Kupang Memorial |
Ali was the best friend of Abdul Latif's late father, Ahmad Mohd Yatim. Ali, who was born in Kg Rambah, and much loved and respected by the villagers.
Also on board were Public Works Department head Datuk Mahfuz Khalid, and Cuban ambassador to Japan Mario García.
"I was too young to follow my father to the site but I heard stories about how human flesh, body parts and hair were hanging on the mangrove trees.
"It was horrific. And in Kebun Teh, before the residential area was fully developed, taxi drivers said they would see headless corpses in the area.
"In the first five years after the memorial was built, the relatives flocked here. But now that it has been 37 years since the tragedy, the number of people who come here have grown lesser," he said.
And no, news of MH370 that went missing on March 8, had not brought the crowd back except perhaps journalists who are out for a fresh news angle.
Abdul Latif said the younger generation may not even know about the memorial.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Keseluruhan Saya Cinta Kamu Semua
Hahahahaha!
I'm a little depressed actually. So am in need of some loving.
Tomorrow is April 6. Indonesians working in Malaysia will come out to cast their votes for the 2014 Indonesian legislative election on April 9 to elect members of both national and regional legislatures.
Tomorrow my story on the Tanjung Kupang crash is expected to come out in the New Sunday Times. The interview brought back sad memories for the mother of one of the victims of MH653. It upset her quite a bit. My intention was never to cause her any pain. Hope she can forgive me.
Tomorrow is also Qingming Festival. The actual day is actually today but Qingming, aka "Tomb Sweeping Day" can be observed two weeks before and after the day of the festival. Tomorrow being a Sunday, the Chinese community, namely Taoists, is expected to be at the graveyards (even though Sunday is not a rest day in Johor).
To Taoist believers, the burning of the paper-made items and "paper money" meant that the departed will be able to receive the items in the other realms or wherever they are right now.
However, Buddhist practitioners believe differently.
Thus, the burning of cheaply-produced paper models and effigies served as an effective educational tool. Witnessing how fire consumes every ‘former possession’ of the deceased, even an illiterate peasant or young child was able to understand this sense of total relinquishment at death.
Today, this practice is completely misunderstood by the majority of Chinese. Instead of the original meaning, paper-made models have been turned into “paper offerings” – with the mistaken thought that whatever one burns, his departed relatives will obtain in the netherworld!
Hence people nowadays burn paper models of the latest i-Pads, smartphones, LED screens, and “paper money” in inflated sums in order to please the dead. All these will not help the departed ones at all. In fact, this misunderstanding will only harm the living by maintaining their ignorance and delusions.
Instead of burning “paper offerings”, one can perform ‘Dedication of Merits’ (Pāli, ‘Pattidāna’) to help their departed relatives." - source Nalanda Buddhist Society.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Oppressive Day: Is It The Heat?
FISHING FOR CUSTOMERS: Damai Seafood Village restaurant not only offers tasty seafood dishes, but also fishing in six ponds on its 11ha site
BE soothed by the rustic setting and kampung ambience as you walk into the Damai Seafood Village.
Located in Kampung Danga, Johor Baru, the restaurant, on a 11ha site, features six fishing ponds of various sizes, and a menu that offers more than 80 dishes.
Opened since 1998, its 39-year-old owner, Aziz Sadikin Mohd Mandak, took over the running of the restaurant from his elder sister who decided to work as a civil servant after running the business for two years.
It was then known as the Damai Fishermen Camp as the restaurant also offers fishing for anglers.
"I decided to change the name after I took over the business. Previously, I was working as a chef in a restaurant in Kluang that was run by a Chinese Muslim.
"That was where I learnt Chinese-style cooking. After I left Kluang, I continued to learn the art of Chinese cooking from other chefs," he said.
"When I was growing up in Gelang Patah, I developed a passion for cooking as my mother ran a food stall outside our house.
"My mother, who is now 61 years old, was the first person who taught me how to cook," he added.
Aziz now runs the business with his brother Mohd Sadikin, 40, also a chef at the restaurant.
"The restaurant has six chefs, two of whom are my brothers-in-law," said Aziz.
His wife, Nurul Izzah Bachok, 26, works as a cashier along with six members of her family.
Among the dishes on the menu are chilli crab, claypot tow foo, siapkap Sri Danga and butter prawns.
"Our fishing ponds are a huge hit with anglers, especially those from Singapore.
The latter are willing to pay as much as RM1,100 for six hours of pleasurable fishing.
"After that, they do not even get to take their fish home as we practise the 'catch and release' concept.
"We have a variety of fish sourced from Kukup.
"Some of the fish weigh between 10kg and 60kg.
"The price of fishing vary, as each pond is different.
"In some ponds, patrons can catch the fish and have it cooked in our restaurant according to their liking," he said.
The restaurant is open from noon to 2.30pm for lunch, and from 5.30pm to midnight for dinner.
On weekends, the opening hours are from noon to midnight.
However, for the month of Ramadan, the opening hours from 4pm to midnight daily, except on Fridays where the restaurant is open from 3pm to midnight.
Read more: Facebook Comments - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/get-hooked-by-a-seafood-village-1.112681/facebook-comments-7.160721#ixzz2xov8EucQ