Showing posts with label Shahrum Sayuthi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shahrum Sayuthi. Show all posts

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Pas Congress 13

by Shahrum Sayuthi

BATU PAHAT: Pas deputy spiritual adviser Datuk Haron Din today told Pas members to brace themselves with the possibility of the party being expelled from Pakatan coalition.
He said such a scenario should not be dismissed despite repeated calls by delegates at the Pas 60th muktamar (annual general meeting) here for the party to remain in the coalition.
"Even in a marriage, if certain conditions had been breeched, it would not be able to be saved and divorce is the only way out," he said.
Relations between Pas and its Pakatan allies PKR and DAP reached a breaking point over the Selangor leadership crisis when it was widely rumoured of late that Sultan of Selangor may appoint a Pas assemblyman as menteri besar on Sept 23.
Haron reminded members that Pas' stand on such matters are based on Islamic teachings unlike that of PKR'd and DAP's.
"We must therefore abide by the Syura Council's decision and support the stand made by our party," he said.

- source NST online

Pas Congress 11

      BATU PAHAT: Pas Youth chief Suhaizan Kaiat has urged all members to unite under the leadership of president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang as a way to resolve the current crisis in the party.
      Suhaizan said Hadi, as president, is a symbol of party unity.
      "We also need to be with other senior leaders like Datuk Seri Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat and Datuk Dr Harun Din. It is also time for us to resolve the crisis because if we do not, it would only lead to more problems to the party," said Suhaizan.
      He also said that party leaders should think of the sacrifices of party members instead of quarreling with each other.
      The Pas leadership has been split following the Selangor leadership crisis between the ulama (religious leaders) faction led by Hadi and the so called "progressive" faction led by deputy president Mohamad Sabu who is known as aligned to PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.
      "Take this muktamar for example. There are many party members who sacrifice their time and money to volunteer their services here but the leaders are having a crisis," said Suhaizan.
      He also asked members not to be so engrossed with current problems that the party is facing that they forgot about other party matters.
      "I would suggest that members spend 70 per cent of their time to think about other party matters so that we can bring the party forward," said Suhaizan.

Friday, September 19, 2014

Pas Congress 9

Some Pas members want to appease Pakatan by rejecting MB's post

by Shahrum Sayuthi
NST online
BATU PAHAT: Concerned with the possibility of Pas leaving the Pakatan coalition following dispute over the Selangor leadership crisis, some members insisted that the party leadership reject the MB post if selected by the Sultan.
The topic continued to be the main talking point on the second day of the party's muktamar (annual general meeting).
First speaker of the debate session today, Wan Kharizal Wan Khazim from Perlis called on the party leadership not to accept a possible appointment of the Selangor Menteri Besar post from among their assemblymen.
He said Pas could not afford to offend PKR and DAP by accepting the post which he insisted should be given to PKR.
"We must maintain our moral integrity and not break our promise to our Pakatan friends," he said.
It was reported that a new MB would be sworn in front of the Selangor Sultan on Sept 23.
Sources had indicated that the Selangor palace was keen to appoint a Pas assemblyman as the new MB instead of one from PKR.
The Selangor leadership crisis was triggered by PKR's Kajang Move which was designed to replace current MB Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim.
The Pas leadership was divided over the issue with the ulama (religious leaders) faction led by party president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang being against the PKR's move while another faction, led by his deputy Mohamad Sabu being supportive of it.
Wan Kharizal said Pas will lose the support of the non-muslim community if it breaks relation with PKR and DAP.
"We have made a lot of gains among the non-muslims in the last general election with the help of our friends. Therefore, we must be sincere with them," he said.
Second speaker, Khairul Anwar Wafa from Negeri Sembilan called on the party leadership to move an urgent motion at the muktamar to reject the possible appointment of its assemblyman as Selangor MB.
"We must make known to our Pakatan Rakyat friends that we do not want the post," he said.
Khairul Anwar, nonetheless qualified his suggestion by pointing out that Pas should not at the same time defy the wish of the Sultan of Selangor if indeed the Ruler wants a Pas assemblyman to be the new MB.
"At least when the time comes, after we had made the urgent motion, we can tell our friends (PKR and DAP) that the appointment is the wish of the Sultan and not ours," he said.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Pas ulama faction backs Hadi

by Shahrum Sayuthi

KULAIJAYA: The Pas ulama (religious leaders) faction yesterday rallied their support behind embattled Pas president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang ahead of the party’s muktamar (annual general meeting), which starts in Batu Pahat today.

Hadi, who has been heavily criticised by Pas’ Pakatan allies and members of the party’s non-ulama faction over his handling of the Selangor leadership crisis, received strong endorsement at the annual meetings of the Syura Council as well as the party’s youth and women wings, which took place in Johor Baru and Kota Tinggi yesterday.

Leading the way were members of the Syura Council, the highest decision-making body of the party, which, among others, demanded the cooperation with PKR and DAP be reviewed because of disagreements over the (Selangor leadership) crisis.

They also demanded that disciplinary action be taken against members who defied Hadi and the council.

The party’s deputy spiritual adviser, Datuk Haron Din, in his opening speech at the Syura Council meeting, called on members to support Hadi and stressed that Pas’ main strength lies in its religious leadership.

He said the attacks against Hadi and the party’s religious leaders, particularly from within the party itself, had worsened of late following the Selangor crisis.

“We were relentlessly attacked by our own, especially in social media. I was even condemned for receiving visits by ministers when warded at IJN (National Heart Institute).”

Haron reminded delegates that Pas’ struggle was meant to uphold Islamic principles and that aim superseded others, including the party’s cooperation with PKR and DAP.

He said cooperation with PKR and DAP had its boundaries, and, if broken, would necessitate its religious leaders to review the party’s position in such a cooperation.

“Once it is felt that such a cooperation has become questionable in terms of Islamic principles, the ulama must rethink our party’s position and members must support that decision.

“Everything is possible, such as in a marriage, which can end in a divorce.”

Reciting Quranic verses to stress his point, Haron said Islamic struggles, as championed by Pas, would never be successful if party members abandoned their ideals for the sake of political gains.
Syura Council acting chief Datuk Ahmad Yaakub said Hadi had done the right thing by upholding the party’s Islamic principles in the face of the Selangor crisis.

He said party members should support Hadi’s decisions, because as party president, he put the interests of Pas and Islam above all else when he decided to defy PKR and DAP by submitting more than two nominations for the menteri besar’s post, as decreed by Sultan of Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah.

“The Syura Council praises and stands firm behind our party president (Hadi) for his steadfastness in upholding the party’s Islamic principles despite being pressured by our Pakatan partners and some of our own leaders,” said Ahmad.

PKR and DAP had insisted that Pas follow their lead by only nominating PKR president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail for the MB’s post.

Members of a another faction within the Pas leadership, known to be aligned to Dr Wan Azizah’s husband, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, had protested against Hadi’s decision to not toe Pakatan’s line on the issue.

Supporters of the faction, known to be led by Hadi’s deputy, Mohamad Sabu, had, over the past weeks launched a cyberwar in social media against Hadi and members of the Syura Council.

The council was the first to oppose the ouster of Selangor MB Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim, but its decision at the start of the crisis, which was supported by Hadi and party spiritual adviser Datuk Nik  Abdul Aziz Nik Mat, was ignored by members of the central committee, dominated by pro-Anwar supporters, who proceeded to support PKR and DAP’s plan to nominate Dr Wan Azizah.

The Selangor leadership crisis was triggered by PKR’s “Kajang Move”, which was designed to have Anwar elected as Kajang assemblyman and subsequently taking over the MB post from Khalid.
The plan, however, was changed after Anwar’s sodomy conviction was upheld by the Court of Appeals in March, upon which Dr Wan Azizah was roped in as a replacement.

Syura Council delegates, who took to the rostrum at their meeting yesterday, repeatedly called for disciplinary action to be taken against those who opposed Hadi and the party’s religious leaders.

They also unanimously passed a number of resolutions demanding the party sanction those who opposed the authority of the party president and Syura Council and the cooperation with PKR and DAP be maintained only if it benefited the party’s struggles to uphold Islam.

- source NST online

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Pas Congress 7

by Shahrum Sayuthi

KULAIJAYA: Pas highest decision making body, the Syura Council today reiterated its support for the leadership of party president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang.

Council acting chief Datuk Ahmad Yaakub in his key note address at the opening of the council's annual general meeting here said Hadi had done the right thing in upholding the party's Islamic principles in face of the current political situation.

Making direct reference to the ongoing conflict among Pakatan coalition members and within Pas itself due to the Selangor leadership crisis, Ahmad said party members should support Hadi's decisions as he was putting the interests of the party and Islam above all else when doing so.

Ahmad said the Syura Council is still opposed to the nomination of PKR president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail as the next Selamgor menteri besar due her questionable capabilities.

He added that the council even opposed the ouster of Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim from that post as he has not been proven guilty of any wrongdoing.

The council, he added was even opposed to the PKR's Kajang Move which triggered the crisis which he said was a waste of public fund due to the ensuing by-election.

"In this matter, the Syura Council praise and stand firm behind our party president (Hadi) for his steadfastness in upholding the party's Islamic principles despite being pressured by our Pakatan partners and some of our own party leaders," said Ahmad.

- source NST online

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Happy Malaysia Day!

Today is the nation's 51st Malaysia Day celebration. It is a public holiday. Today is also the start of the Pas' 60th AGM. I wrote about it in

All eyes will be on this congress. Let's watch what happens.
Meanwhile, NST's political editor Shahrum Sayuthi writes on the matter
In the NST online edition today

JOHOR BARU: The Pas’ 60th muktamar (annual general assembly), set to be held in Parit Salleh Ros in Parit Raja, Batu Pahat from Thursday till Saturday had an earlier than scheduled curtain raiser when its youth wing decided to start its meeting today.
Pas Youth was initially to have just a day meeting on Wednesday, but the plan was changed in the final hours.
“We have a lot to discuss at our meeting,” said a source within the party’s wing without elaborating when asked about the need to have more time for their meeting.
It was nonetheless understood that Pas Youth leaders had decided that they needed additional time to conduct their meeting due to the latest development in the Selangor leadership crisis which had seriously damaged relations not only between Pas and its Pakatan allies but also among the factions who made up the party’s own leadership.
The party’s youth wing leadership was said to be equally divided between the religious and so called “progressive” factions who opposed each other over the issue of whether Pas should stand united with its Pakatan allies at all costs or give priority to defending its own Islamic ideals.
The Pas Youth meeting was to be held at Dewan Choon Moi, Kota Tinggi starting at 12.30pm today.
The party’s religious leadership body, known as Dewan Ulama and the party’s women wing, better known as Dewan Muslimat will start their meeting as scheduled on Wednesday at 9am.
The Dewan Ulama meeting will be at the IOI Resort in Kulaijaya, while the Dewan Muslimat’s to be at Pulai Spring Resort, here.
It was expected that both the Dewan Ulama and the women wing will reiterate their support for party president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang who recently broke rank with his PKR and DAP counterparts by nominating three candidates for the MB post as decreed by the Selangor Sultan, instead of just PKR president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.
Hadi was heavily criticised for his decision not only by PKR and DAP leaders but also the faction within Pas known to be supportive of PKR de-facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.
The Pas muktamar is held in Johor for the first time this year with the initial aim of creating a better presence for the party in this state which has always been known as an Umno’s stronghold.
Pas had in the last two general elections made some inroad in Johor, winning the State seats of Maharani and Sungai along in 2008, and adding two more, Parit Yaani and Puteri Wangsa last year.
Observers however had predicted that the muktamar will instead be dominated by heated discussions on the party’s problems stemming from the Selangor leadership crisis which had split Pas into factions which on one side is supportive of the party’s own ideals and the other who insisted on the importance of relations with PKR and DAP above all else.
The organising of the muktamar has been problematic from the start when the organizer had to abandoned its original plan of holding it at Taman Sutera Utama in Skudai, here after a disagreement with the landowner forced the party to switch the venue to the one in Batu Pahat.
It is also interesting to note that the muktamar is being held during the campaigning period for the Pengkalan Kubor by-election, where PAS candidate Wan Rosdi Wan Ibrahim is facing a three-cornered fight in the by-election against Barisan Nasional's Mat Razi Mat Ail and independent candidate Izat Bukhary Ismail Bukhary.
The voting for the by-election is scheduled for September 25.


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Pas "wild card" Candidate

Pas to submit third name to Selangor palace

by Shahrum Sayuthi

A NST exclusive sourced from NST online
 
SHAH ALAM: Pas will defy its Pakatan allies and nominate a third person to replace Selangor Menteri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim.

A high-ranking party official told the New Straits Times yesterday that the party would submit three names, including  that of PKR president Datuk  Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail and her deputy, Azmin Ali, to the Selangor palace for consideration.

The official said Pas would obey Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah’s decree on Aug 26 for the Islamist party, PKR and DAP to nominate at least three candidates for the menteri besar’s post by tomorrow.

“It is better to have the third name anyway as it could be the solution in case something goes wrong with the other two names.” Khalid was sacked from PKR on Aug 9 as part of the party’s attempt to replace him with Dr Wan Azizah, the wife of de facto party leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

The move had been met with fierce criticism, with Pas leading the charge in insisting that Khalid be retained.

It then changed its stance and supported the move to remove Khalid, but remained steadfast in complying with the palace’s decree.

Two assemblymen from PKR — Dr Idris Ahmad of Ijok and Dr Yaakob Sapari of Kota Anggerik — are thought to be the front runners to be the third Pas “wild card” candidate.

The Pas official said a decision on the matter would be made in a meeting before the deadline.
“However, I have not yet been notified of the date and time of the meeting, but it should be held before Wednesday (tomorrow).”

The official said the Selangor leadership crisis would likely be discussed during debates at the party’s upcoming muktamar (annual general assembly) from Sept 18 to 20 in Johor.

The venue of the assembly, initially set to be in Johor Baru but would likely to be changed to “somewhere outside the state capital”, will be decided after a party leadership meeting on Sept 7.

On efforts by certain quarters to “persuade” Selangor Pas assemblymen to sign a statutory declaration (SD) in support of Dr Wan Azizah’s candidacy, the official said the matter was being handled by the Selangor party leaders.

The party’s patience has been pushed to the limit, with  Selangor Pas secretary Mohd Khairuddin Othman declaring on Sunday that the party would expose “the lobbyists” if this continued.

The move has widened rifts in the loose opposition pact, with two Pas assemblymen, Saari Sungib (Hulu Klang) and Hasnul Baharuddin (Morib), along with their DAP and PKR counterparts, signing a SD on Aug 14 in support of Dr Wan Azizah. The remaining 13 Selangor Pas assemblymen did not sign the SD.

This did not sit well with the Selangor Pas ulama wing, which passed a motion on Saturday condemning Saari and Hasnul. The motion will be forwarded to the party’s disciplinary committee for action to be taken against the two.

Meanwhile, Pas Youth chief Suhaizan Kaiat said the party’s wing was concerned with the developments in Selangor, particularly the tussle in Pakatan over the choice of the new menteri besar.

On the wish by certain quarters in Pas, particularly from Kelantan, to field a candidate for the upcoming Pengkalan Kubor by-election on Sept 25, Suhaizan said the matter should be “amicably discussed” with PKR, which had also insisted on contesting the seat despite losing there in the last two general elections

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Khalid did it by the book

sourced from NST online

WHAT transpired at Istana Bukit Kayangan yesterday was in contrast to the dramatic way PKR attempted to oust Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim from the menteri besar’s post.

Maintaining decorum, the rule of law and even good manners was how it was in the Selangor palace when Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah consented to give an audience to Khalid for the latter to present the facts of the state leadership crisis and his resignation as menteri besar.

There was no spectacular dissolution of the state legislative assembly to pave the way for a snap election, nor was there an abrupt sacking of Khalid. The sultan, instead, wanted everyone to follow the law and established conventions to settle the crisis.

Sultan Sharafuddin had decreed that since the loose coalition of PKR, DAP and Pas claimed that they had the majority in the state assembly, they should nominate a new menteri besar and Khalid concurred by tendering his resignation, each of the three parties should observe the established convention of presenting to the palace at least three names from among Pakatan assemblymen for the post.

The sultan had also insisted for the state not to go rudderless and told Khalid to remain at his post until his successor had been chosen from among those to be proposed by Pakatan.

Typical of Khalid, he followed procedures and, being a loyal subject of the sultan, agreed to stay in office until his replacement had been chosen.

There was no throwing of tantrums, nor angry threats as compared with what went on during the weekend at the PKR congress in Shah Alam when the party’s Wanita chief, Zuraida Kamaruddin, described any attempt to dissolve the state legislative assembly as “nonsense and against the Constitution”.

Even newly minted party vice-president Rafizi Ramli warned Khalid not to advise the sultan to dissolve the assembly at the risk of “losing the last shred of decency left in him”.

As Khalid told the packed press conference after his audience with the sultan, he presented the facts of the crisis to the ruler and then submitted himself to the monarch’s discretion. Nothing more, nothing less.

Nonetheless, underneath the layers of subtleties of the sultan’s decree and Khalid’s proper response, there was a clear hint that PKR, in its haste to replace Khalid with its president, Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, had not observed the proper protocol in a matter of such importance.

This was especially so when PKR and its allies made it clear to the palace that it had to accept no one else other than Dr Wan Azizah for the menteri besar post when they sent a letter to that effect to Sultan Sharafuddin on Aug 15.

Among the less subtle observers, the move could even be deemed as an attempt by Pakatan to force the sultan to abide by its wishes on the matter.

It was as if everything had to be done in a confrontational manner and in bad faith to settle the impasse.

The ball is now in Pakatan’s court and it will be for the coalition to choose whether it wants to continue playing hardball or toe the line of laws and conventions as decreed by the sultan.

It should be noted that Sultan Sharafuddin’s insistence on Pakatan observing the convention of presenting at least three candidates for the menteri besar’s post could also mean that the ruler intends for all sides in the dispute to revert to Selangor’s unwritten traditions in choosing the state’s chief executive.

It should also be noted that tradition also points to another interesting fact — Khalid and most former menteris besar were chosen from among assemblymen who hailed from the Selangor Malay heartland, in particular Kuala Selangor.

It is the same convention observed to a large extent in the selection of Johor menteris besar, who have mostly come from the state’s Malay heartland of Muar.

If PKR and its allies are to follow that tradition, they should, therefore, name at least one person from that area as those previously mentioned — Dr Wan Azizah and her party deputy Azmin Ali — are not Selangor-born.Perhaps one name that should be considered is that of Dr Idris Ahmad, PKR’s Ijok assemblyman, who is said to be well-liked by the sultan.

The tussle over the Selangor menteri besar post is still open to any conclusion as of now, except that the sultan had made it clear that it must be reached without all the mess which had earlier caused much discomfort among the people of Selangor ever since the so-called “Kajang Move” was initiated by PKR to oust Khalid.

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Waiting ...

sourced from NST online

"THERE SHOULD NOT BE ANY SNAP POLLS IN SELANGOR"

By Shahrum Sayuthi
SHAH ALAM: PKR Wanita chief Zuraida Kamaruddin had insisted that there should not be any snap state elections due to the Selangor leadership crisis.
Zuraida said any decision to initiate such a snap poll will be an act of "nonsense and against the constitution".
Speaking at the PKR's women wing meeting today, she called on party members not to spread rumors that the Sultan of Selangor will dissolve the state assembly for a snap state election to be held.
"Any move to initiate a (state election) will make the people of Selangor angry and this will result in Umno being wiped out in this state. The result will be 56-0," she said, in reference to the number of seats in the Selangor assembly.
The Selangor leadership crisis was triggered by PKR move to replace its menteri besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim with party president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.
Khalid was sacked from the party on Aug 9.
Sultan of Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah was expected to decide on the matter upon his return from abroad tomorrow.

"WALKOUT"

By Adrian Lai
SHAH ALAM: Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad’s tenure as the new PKR Youth chief got off to a rocky start today after at least half of his committee members staged a walkout just moments before making his inaugural speech.
Nik Nazmi was about to give his maiden speech as PKR Youth chief at the end of the wing’s annual congress held here, when at least nine out of its 20 newly elected committee members left the hall.
It is understood that the committee members walked out in protest of the election results, which saw Nik Nazmi edging out popular PKR leader Amirudin Shari by a razor-thin majority of 250 votes.
Nik Nazmi, who is also Selangor Deputy Speaker, obtained 4,509 votes, while Amirudin, who was originally touted to win, received 4,259 votes.
One of the committee members, who declined to be named, said he was unhappy with the results, claiming they were flawed and manipulated.
It is understood that the dissenters are aligned aligned with Amirudin.
Nik Nazmi, who is seen to be aligned to PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s camp, said he was unfazed by the purported walkout.
“My message to those who left the hall is simple: Let us all get down to business. We have no time for this as this is the nature of politics. In fact, I lost my old position in my own branch,” the seemingly undaunted leader told reporters later.
The Seri Setia assemblyman also shrugged off the walkout, saying he was confident that the current disagreements between him and the opposing camp were “temporary”.
“Our opponents are not in the hall, they are in Barisan Nasional. I am open to talking (to my detractors) but they must also show commitment that they are willing to work with me,” Nik Nazmi stressed.
When asked if Nik Nazmi would offer an olive branch to Amirudin by giving the latter a high-ranking post in PKR Youth, Nik Nazmi said it was too soon to decide on the matter.
Amirudin, who belongs to PKR deputy president Azmin Ali’s camp, was leading the race for the Youth post, but his supporters believe that the "questionable" election results in PKR’s Pensiangan branch recently had tipped the race in Nik Nazmi’s favour.

Friday, August 22, 2014

Using "Cables" To Win

PKR'S Leadership Condemned For Malpractice During Party Election

by Shahrum Sayuthi

SHAH ALAM: A speaker at the PKR Women Congress had lashed out at the party's national leadership for their failure to stop malpractice during the party's recent over three months election process.

Norhanazalmah Mat Yusuf who represents PKR Kelantan Wanita wing alleged that some of those who contested for party posts had used their "cables" to get the backing of national leaders.

"My heart hurts when I see these people using their cables to win in the party elections.

"There were indeed incidences of irregular acts which were supported by some national leaders."

Norhanazalmah warned those involved in corrupt practices during the recent party election that "divine retribution" will be upon them if they fail to repent.

"To all those traitors, don't you all know that your stupid actions will destroy the party," she said.

Daughter Says ...

Wan Azizah is fit to be Selangor MB

by Shahrum Sayuthi

SHAH ALAM: PKR vice-president Nurul Izzah Anwar today insisted that her mother, party president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail is fit to be the menteri besar of Selangor.

Delivering a speech at the PKR Women Congress at Bukit Melawati Stadium here, Nurul Izzah hits out at those who cited religous reasons for opposing the appointment of a woman as a leader.

"We are wondering why there are still many in our society who regarded the appointment of a woman as a leader being taboo.

"This is especially so among those who used religious arguments to hinder women from being leaders."

Later at a press conference, Nurul Izzah said her support for the appointment of her mother as the new Selangor MB was based on the party's endorsement for Dr Wan Azizah to take over the post.

The Pakatan coalition had nominated the PKR president to replace the now independent MB Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim.

Khalid was sacked from PKR after he refused to step down from his MB post to accomodate the party's so-called Kajang Move.

The move to install Dr Wan Azizah as MB was however made complicated after it met with resistance from especially Pas ulama leaders who among others argued that she was not suitable for the post due to her gender.

PKR Wanita chief Zuraida Kamaruddin supported Nurul Izzah's assertions that Dr Wan Azizah may likely be a better MB than Khalid.

On the apparent low turn out at the congress, Zuraida said it has enough quorum to proceed.

Only about one third of the seats at the space provided for the delegates were filled up at the start of the congress.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Damage Done Even If Pakatan Survives Selangor Crisis



sourced from NST online

There is a general sense of foreboding among the Pakatan grassroots that the ongoing power struggle in Selangor may wreck the loose alliance.

Pas’ insistence on defending the position of Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim as menteri besar against the wishes of PKR and DAP is indeed a threat to the almost eight-year-old alliance.

Pas, which itself was divided over the issue had tried to keep a lid on it with secretary-general Datuk Mustafa Ali issuing a gag order two days ago.

However, a lot of angry words had already been directed at Pas, especially by DAP leaders, with the most glaring being that by Tony Pua, the party’s Selangor chairman.

He had on Thursday predicted that Pas would be wiped out in the state if the party’s refusal to play ball on Khalid’s removal culminated with a snap election.

It reflects Pua’s apparent lack of regard for his party’s Islamist ally, a sentiment, which is likely shared among many DAP leaders.

Pas leaders, especially the younger conservatives, are not likely to take such insults lying down.

Many felt that their party had bent overly backwards to accommodate its Pakatan partners, to the extent of compromising its core principle of wanting Malaysia to be its version of an Islamic state.

Pas had even sacked and sidelined senior leaders such as former Selangor commissioner Datuk Dr Hasan Ali and former deputy president Nasharudin Mat Isa, who were perceived to be against the cooperation with PKR and DAP.

As it is, Pas is the Pakatan component party with the least number of seats in Parliament, with 21 as compared with PKR’s 30 and DAP’s 38.

Many in Pas wanted their leaders to change the perception that their party is merely DAP’s poodle and subservient to the whims and fancies of PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

It should be borne in mind that many Pas leaders have been unhappy from the start when Anwar initiated the Kajang Move, which led to the present impasse in Selangor.

Nonetheless, the spectre of another opposition coalition break-up is something which Pakatan leaders from all sides are at the moment trying to avoid.

The weakening of Barisan Alternative (BA) following DAP’s withdrawal in 2001 should not be far from their mind.

The outcome was a fragmented opposition being badly beaten by BN in the 2004 general election with the ruling coalition winning over 90 per cent of the parliamentary seats.

BA was disbanded after that.

Despite their open support for Khalid, Pas president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang and the party’s spiritual leader Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat had insisted that cooperation within Pakatan should continue.

The rumour mills may be going on an overdrive over the past weeks about the possibility of Pas joining forces with Umno in Selangor and ultimately at the national level, but such a scenario is for now still too far-fetched to be considered seriously.

Many Pas leaders, including Nik Aziz in particular, have always been abhorrent of such a cooperation and there has been nothing currently to indicate that they had changed their mind about it.

Nonetheless, how Hadi and Nik Aziz are going to get Pas to stand its ground on the Selangor crisis without causing the meltdown of Pakatan will be interesting to observe.

Even if they manage to do so, the hurt caused by the barbs already thrown by their Pakatan partners regarding this issue would be hard to heal.

It would be even worse if they have actually relented and let PKR and DAP have their way. The repercussions could be severe at the party’s grassroots level.

In all likelihood, the issue is almost certain to drag on even if PKR president Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail should in the end be appointed as the new Selangor menteri besar.

At the end of it all, even if Pakatan survives the Selangor crisis, there would already have been so much bad blood between Pas and its allies that their ties would have turned truly toxic.

Friday, May 30, 2014

On the Ground


Teluk Intan: BN can win, says Muhyiddin

 
TELUK INTAN: BN deputy chairman Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin says the coalition has a good chance to win the Teluk Intan by-election tomorrow despite DAP's aggressive campaign. He said feedback from the ground have been favourable for BN ever since the campaign started last week.



"We are going to push all the way until the campaign period ends at midnight today," he said after a breakfast session with leaders of local Indian non-governmental organisations here this morning.

Muhyiddin, nonetheless reminded BN party workers to observe decorum while campaigning in light of the Perak's state of mourning following the passing of the late Sultan Azlan Shah.

He also expressed regret over the DAP leadership's decision to proceed with a boisterous open air ceramah in the middle of this town last night.

"I think they are desperate to win. That's why they do not seem to care about the state mourning period," he said.

Earlier, Muhyiddin appealed for the local Indian NGO leaders to help BN candidate Datuk Mah Siew Keong who hails from this town to win the by-election.

"He (Mah) is from here and know better your needs and how to help your community," he said.

Mah faces DAP candidate Dyana Sofya Mohd Daud at the poll tomorrow.

Read more: Teluk Intan: BN can win, says Muhyiddin - Latest - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/latest/font-color-red-teluk-intan-font-bn-can-win-says-muhyiddin-1.608165#ixzz33AvPtEvk

Polling Tomorrow: All The Best

30 May 2014

'DAP resorting to dirty tactics to fish for votes'



By Shahrum Sayuthi
  

PERSONAL ATTACKS: Party going overboard with comments about BN, says Mah

THE mild-mannered Datuk Mah Siew Keong is not a man who easily gets upset.

But when asked about DAP's aggressive campaigning tactics for the Teluk Intan by-election, the Barisan Nasional candidate found it hard to conceal his feelings.

"I have contested many times over the past 20 years. However, I have never encountered having my poster smeared with the word 'bodoh' (stupid)," he said on Tuesday.

As campaigning for the by-election enters its final stage, DAP is stepping up its attacks against BN. Mah is of course at the centre of the cross hairs.

At its nightly ceramah, DAP leaders and their allies from PKR and Pas are depicting Mah as weak, an Umno lackey and president of a dead party, in reference to Gerakan.

On Tuesday night at the Anson Industrial Park, DAP supremo Lim Kit Siang did not even bother to go through the usual niceties in the opening of his speech but instead directly launched an attack on Mah, among others, rubbishing the latter's manifesto, which was launched earlier on the same day.

After he was done with Mah, Lim proceeded to attack other BN leaders, such as Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak and his deputy, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin.

Other speakers, such as Lim's son Guan Eng, who is the chief minister of Penang and opposition leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, repeated the same pattern of aggressive speeches without even sparing retired BN leaders such as former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Mah's predecessor, former Gerakan president Tan Sri Koh Tsu Koon.

The usual allegations of corruption and bad governance were bandied about by all the speakers, which, without a doubt, were intended to instil hatred against BN.

Such was the aggressive tone of the speeches that Anwar, at one point, even remarked that members of the Chinese community, who supported BN, were "stupid".

"The prime minister came and said, 'Apa lagi Cina mahu' (what else do the Chinese want), and there was a minister who had labelled the Chinese as intruders. Yet, there are still members from the community who had shouted 'Long live BN'.

"Chinese of these sort are really stupid," Anwar allegedly said.

Such rhetoric, despite their factual inaccuracy, have after all been a potent weapon wielded by DAP and its allies since the 2008 General Election.

This time, Mah has to bear the full brunt as all of the opposition's "big guns" were in Teluk Intan in support of his opponent, Dyana Sofya Mohd Daud of DAP.

Mah, in contrast, told his campaign workers not to be confrontational or retaliate in the face of provocation.

He gave instructions to those campaigning on his behalf not to touch on the personality of his opponent and her family members.

It was rare for the names of DAP and other opposition leaders to be mentioned by speakers at BN campaign functions.

The focus of BN's campaign has always been on what the ruling coalition can offer to the people.

As the campaigning winds down for polling on Saturday, the people of Teluk Intan are presented with two choices which can be reflected by the way both sides have conducted themselves over the past two weeks.

Read more: 'DAP resorting to dirty tactics to fish for votes' - Columnist - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/columnist/dap-resorting-to-dirty-tactics-to-fish-for-votes-1.607947#ixzz339ZPPEUw

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Thorny Issue




Friday, May 23, 2014

Follow The Crowd or Follow Your Heart

Was surfing the Internet and came across an old story of a some said fishmonger, some said  restaurant owner --- who had cut off the two front legs of a baby cat who allegedly stole a fish. The incident took place in May 2005.

The victim was named Hero by its rescuer, Mohd Hairey Yahya, after the ordeal.  Hero died in Nov 2013 from leukemia.


In a separate issue, I also found this commentary by Shahrum Sayuthi which came out in the NST on 20 May 2014.


IT looked like just another typical Pas ceramah at a Malay village on Sunday night. There was the usual crowd of about 500 people, stalls selling food and knick-knacks as well as Pas leaders lambasting the Barisan Nasional government, particularly the Umno leadership.

The ceramah at Kampung Bahagia, Teluk Intan, was, however, special as it was actually the launch of Pakatan's election machinery for DAP's defence of the parliamentary constituency.

Noticeably absent in the speeches was any obvious mention of Pas' currently most talked about ambition, the implementation of hudud in Kelantan, which has been fiercely opposed by DAP.

Among the Pas leaders present were deputy president Mohamed Sabu, vice-president Datuk Husam Musa and Muslimah chief Siti Zailah Mohd Yusoff.

The DAP leaders started to arrive one after another halfway through the ceramah, led by party supremo Lim Kit Siang and his son, secretary-general Lim Guan Eng, who is also Penang chief minister.

The star attraction, DAP's candidate for the Teluk Intan by-election, Dyana Sofya Mohd Daud, was the last to arrive.

The normally modern-looking 27-year-old looked demure in a pink baju kurung and a headscarf.
Her presence immediately heightened the excitement of those present as she made her way through the crowd to the VIPs' tent.

Her reputed good looks was not lost on the crowd, especially among the men, as some made loud remarks on how pretty she was.

There was even a request for her phone number from a member of the audience as she introduced herself at the beginning of her speech.

It was just not the crowd that took a particular interest in Dyana Sofya's looks.

Husam, in his speech earlier, made a reference about how being a beauty is a bonus on top of her credibility as a candidate.

The DAP's choice of candidate and campaign strategy in the Teluk Intan by-election indicates the party's desire to extend its support base among the Malay electorate.

Fresh from winning overwhelming support from its traditional power base, the Chinese community, DAP appeared confident enough to place the fresh-faced Dyana Sofya as its candidate in the constituency where Malays make up about 38 per cent of the electorate.

It is a show of supreme confidence by the party that it will not lose the support of the local Chinese community, who make up the biggest chunk of Teluk Intan voters at 41 per cent, even with it fielding a young Malay female candidate.

Estimates indicated that DAP's former member of parliament there, Seah Leong Peng, who died on May 1, had won about 90 per cent of the Chinese votes there in the 13th General Election last year.

With the shadow of Pas' plan to table the private members' bill in Parliament to effect the implementation of hudud in Kelantan, DAP had come out with a clever gambit to show that the opposition pact could still win the Malay support even without Pas pulling out its conservative Islamic card.

Read more: DAP tries to show it can do it without Pas - Columnist - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/columnist/dap-tries-to-show-it-can-do-it-without-pas-1.601265#ixzz32WPcjR2d

Two Interesting Commentaries


21 May 2014
DAP may have misjudged voters
By Shahrum Sayuthi 

EXPERIENCE COUNTS: BN can win seat if Mah puts campaign into high gear

IT was obvious from the start of this Teluk Intan by-election campaign that DAP has the advantage over Barisan Nasional.

Barely a year ago, its candidate, the late Seah Leong Peng, defeated BN's Datuk Mah Siew Keong and independent candidate K. Moralingam with a 7,313-vote majority.

On paper, Mah, the Gerakan president who was once again chosen as the BN candidate to represent the people of Teluk Intan, should find it tough to reverse such a huge majority.

Nonetheless, DAP's fielding of a young female Malay candidate in this constituency, where the Chinese make up the biggest block of voters at 41 per cent, requires the party to project the underdog image. Dyana Sofya Mohd Daud played that role well on Monday.

Speaking to reporters after the nomination process, she said her main challenge in the by-election was facing an experienced and respected opponent.

"As a young candidate, I have to face an experienced and respected opponent. For me, that is a challenge," she said, adding that she considered herself the underdog.

Mah is indeed no greenhorn. He is, after all, a local and was Teluk Intan member of parliament from 1999 to 2008 as well as the president of a party. At 52, he is also not too old.

However, Dyana Sofya, who is just 27 and whose only political experience is being the aide of DAP supremo Lim Kit Siang, has the full might of her party's well-oiled machinery in a constituency that, for the past half a decade, has been transformed into an opposition stronghold.

In these early days of campaigning, DAP is clearly in the lead, with posters of Dyana Sofya and the party's flags outnumbering those of Mah and BN's in Teluk Intan.

Her reputed good looks was also a main draw, with many attending DAP ceramah just to have a look at her.

It is, without a doubt, a novelty to see a good-looking young Malay lady being a devoted DAP member, what more chosen as the party's candidate.

If  DAP had chosen her to draw attention away from its tussle with Pas over hudud, it was clearly a success.

Pas supporters attending a ceramah at Kampung Bahagia on Sunday night were not interested in hearing about the virtues of the party's efforts to implement the syariah penal code, and instead were more keen to see and hear the winsome young DAP candidate on stage.

It is highly likely DAP may get extra votes from Malay constituents by fielding Dyana Sofya on top of retaining the overwhelming support of the local Chinese community which powered it to victory in the general election last year.

Everything, however, is not lost for BN, as voters in Teluk Intan may not be as simplistic as calculated by DAP strategists. They may even find such tactics by DAP an insult to their intelligence.

Mah may still turn the table around if BN shift their campaign gear a few notches higher over the coming days and all the way to polling day on May 31


COMMENTARY BY THE MALAYSIAN INSIDER

It is just supposed to be a parliamentary by-election but the battle for Teluk Intan is now between Dyana Sofya Mohd Daud (pic) and Umno, which appears to be rattled by her candidacy on a DAP ticket.

She has apparently struck fear in several Umno leaders, from Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad to Wanita Umno chief Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil  – who have all castigated the political novice for not joining Umno.

Even Perkasa president Datuk Ibrahim Ali has thrown his soiled fingers into the fray, urging Gerakan to use a photograph of him together with the 27-year-old DAP candidate as campaign fodder.

But Gerakan has refused to use the photograph as part of the campaign by their president Datuk Mah Siew Keong, the Barisan Nasional (BN) candidate for the May 31 by-election.

So why is Umno so afraid of the young UiTM law graduate, whose mother is an Umno member? Several reasons come to mind.

One. Dyana Sofya's candidacy on a DAP ticket shows that Umno is not the only party for Malays, apart from PKR or PAS. Particularly when more Malaysians are seeing themselves as Malaysians and not identifying themselves along racial lines.

As more of that happens, Umno and other race-based parties and even groups like Perkasa will have fewer members and cease to exist or even be relevant in Malaysia.

Dr Mahathir, Shahrizat and even Ibrahim can't allow this to happen because this will be the end of Umno and its dominance in Malaysian politics.

Two. Dr Mahathir is right, the younger generation have forgotten the hard work of the early Umno members and leaders. Perhaps that is because the old Umno was de-registered under his watch.

The Umno today is Umno Baru, a pale shadow of the Umno of Tunku Abdul Rahman and Tun Abdul Razak Hussein that fought for Malaya's independence in 1957. The Umno today believes in keeping everything for itself, and only sharing the crumbs with others.

And every day, Umno gives Malaysians a reason to detest them. Every day.

Three. Dyana Sofya's candidacy shows that there are political parties out there willing to gamble on youth and idealism rather than just rely on the tried and tested or the experienced politician.

There isn't much of a queue in DAP unlike BN parties where party presidents and top officials are favoured as candidates over younger members. Perhaps it is also the fact that young talent have deserted the BN component parties.

Malaysia's future belongs to Dyana Sofya's generation, not the ones who have already tasted power and want to keep it for a while more.

Four. Dyana Sofya's candidacy shows that young graduates, even from local varsities, such as UiTM, have the intelligence, mettle and leadership skills to strike their own path instead of following what their parents want them to do.

These young Malaysians can think and know they can make the difference. They are hungry and they don't want to bide their time.

If anything, this mindset is the anti-thesis of a typical BN member who does what he or she is told and waits patiently in line for a shot at political office.

Only some, especially those in the inner circle, make it in BN. That might not be the case in DAP or other PR parties which have had to put up young candidates due to the lack of those willing to run for political office.

If more Malaysians, especially Malays, follow Dyana Sofya's footsteps, then a party like Umno will come to an untimely end.

Umno cannot allow that to happen and it has to demonise, castigate, heckle and humiliate Dyana Sofya so that others will not follow her footsteps and join parties willing to take a chance on them.

Her success and victory in Teluk Intan will be more than just DAP keeping a seat in parliament or another young Malay becoming a DAP MP. It also means that Umno cannot assert itself as the only platform for the Malays to keep power or run Malaysia.

That is the sad state of Umno these days, that it has to fight a young woman just to keep power. - May 20, 2014.