NOTA UNTUK PM DARI BLOGGERS PRO UMNO!

NOTA UNTUK PM DARI BLOGGERS PRO UMNO!

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Who are the real racists?

Let us read another letter from the reader to Utusan Malaysia dated 2nd October 2010.

SIAPA SEBENARNYA RASIS?

DALAM isu Namewee yang menghasilkan klip video perkauman dan tiga remaja Cina yang melakukan khianat terhadap sebuah surau, Lim Kit Siang gagal memberikan reaksi proaktifnya. Beliau bukan hanya gagal mendesak kerajaan bertindak tegas terhadap mereka, sebaliknya membela pula mereka terlibat sebagai mangsa provokasi perkauman.

Sebenarnya, kita semua faham bahawa Namewee dan tiga remaja Cina tersebut adalah sekaum dengan Kit Siang. Itulah puncanya pemimpin DAP itu terang-terangan membela mereka walaupun secara dasarnya bukti jelas menunjukkan mereka bersalah!

Sebaliknya, kes yang melibatkan pengetua-pengetua Melayu hanyalah sekadar dengar cakap dan masih belum dibuktikan, tetapi disebabkan mereka adalah tertuduh Melayu yang beragama Islam, langsung Kit Siang menjatuhkan hukuman bersalah sehingga mendesak Timbalan Perdana Menteri merangkap Menteri Pelajaran mengenakan tindakan ke atas pengetua dan guru terbabit.

Pemimpin seperti inilah yang merosakkan keharmonian masyarakat berbilang kaum di negara ini. Namun, yang peliknya masih ramai orang Melayu terutama penyokong Pas amat menyanjunginya.

NORHISYAM MOHAMAD

Kuala Kedah

More and more citizens especially the Malays should be more vocal and write to the editors of the local newspapers to voice out their dissatisfaction towards the biased treatment of the Malays and of the Chinese who seems to get away with anything maybe even murder.

Why is it until now Namewee is still not being charged for making fun of the National Anthem by renaming it Negarakuku? Even though it is done when he was still in Taiwan, the youtube had been viewed by everyone around the world.

This is not good for the goodwill of Malaysia because of this ungrateful pig face educated in a racist vernacular school and furthering his studies in Taiwan.

This proves that vernacular schools are a breeding place for the racists Chinese and Indians who are still forgetting that they are now not in China or India. These country is called Malaysia, okay?

Therefore, every citizen should go to one school to promote unity because vernacular schools do not promote unity amongst the different races as proven by the pigface Namewee and the 3 other Chinese teenager who threw red paint inside a 'surau'.

If you are not satisfied, you can go back to communist China or India because this country belongs to the Malays.


Saturday, October 2, 2010

A letter from a reader published in Utusan Malaysia

PENIAGA MELAYU DISABOTAJ

SAYA bersimpati dengan nasib peniaga Melayu di Alamanda, Putrajaya. Menurut cerita peniaga kiosk di sana pun menerima tekanan. Kebanyakan peniaga kecil adalah orang Melayu. Pelanggannya pun sudah tentu daripada penjawat kerajaan dan penduduk di Putrajaya yang sedia maklum terdiri daripada orang Melayu.

Sewa di kiosk pun khabarnya sedikit demi sedikit naik setiap tahun. Sekarang sewa sebuah kiosk yang kecil sudah mencecah RM3,800.

Sebelum ini, ia diuruskan oleh Putrajaya Holdings. Tetapi, sejak Januari 2010, ia diambil alih Suria KLCC. Dan bermulalah era baru di mana keseluruhan pengurusan telah dirombak dan bermacam-macam peraturan baru yang kadang kala tidak masuk akal dikenakan. Dahulu bahagian kiosk dijaga oleh seorang Melayu, sekarang ia telah diambil alih seorang wanita Cina.

Apa yang mengejutkan sejak wanita itu mengambil tugas, kontrak peniaga kiosk yang tamat tempoh tidak diperbaharui. Saya minta pihak kerajaan melihat perkara ini dengan serius kerana mungkin ada unsur mensabotaj para peniaga Melayu di Alamanda. Mungkin ada usaha mahu mengeluarkan peniaga Melayu dan memasukkan peniaga Cina di Alamanda. Mengapa semua pusat beli-belah mahu dibolot oleh satu bangsa sahaja?

Paling malang, ia mahu dilakukan di Putrajaya, di mana ia adalah kawasan orang Melayu. Suria KLCC jangan jadi satu kuasa untuk menjatuhkan orang Melayu. Lihat sahaja betapa mahal sewanya di Alamanda.

AZMAN AZIM

Puchong, Selangor

Malays must never forget that the Chinese will do whatever it takes to help other Chinese even to the extend of chasing out Malay traders as had happened before in Penang.

Therefore, since we know that the Chinese could be that cruel, are we going to succumb to their cruelty or fight back by working harder to prove that Malays are better than the Chinese?

Those working in government agencies have to ensure that those in charge of what can be important to the survival of the Malays must be handle by a Malay because if a Chinese handle it, they will be biased and do anything under the sun to sabotage the Malays.




Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Don't broadcast your wealth to anyone if you want to be safe!

Erni Dekritawati Yuliana Buhari, the eldest daughter of cosmetics queen Datuk Sosilawati Lawiya had voiced out her concerns about the safety of her siblings after speculative reports on her family's wealth and detailed background reports could make them targets of certain parties.

Since her mother had suffered a horrific fate at the hands of the conmen cum murderers, I am sure she is afraid that her siblings and herself could suffer the same fate when the media had been publishing about their purported wealth of RM157 million.

There are many bad people out there and none of them has any indication of what kind of person they really are. They could look innocent, act innocent but their true behaviour of being a criminal could be hidden from their families or the public which would be surprised when it is revealed finally that they are the culprit of some brutal crime as what had happened to the 2 lawyer brothers.

On her late mother, Erni said what she missed most was Sosilawati's straightforwardness.


"If we were wrong, she would tell it to us straight in our faces. She was never discreet when it came to correcting us.


"Looking back now, it was that kind of upbringing that has shaped us," said Erni, adding that she had become stronger after her mother's passing.


She said Sosilawati shared her trials in life with her children.


"She told us how she hard she worked to build her business."


But when it came to her private life, Sosilawati was almost silent. Her children never pushed her for they respected her privacy.


Erni said she respected the decision of her stepfather, an Indonesian, who has not come out in the open following Sosilawati's death.


"We still keep in touch but if he decides to lay low, we respect that."

The excerpt was taken from NST dated 27th September 2010 in an article titled "I'll continue her legacy".

Hence, for us all, we should make an example of this true story. Don't tell anyone about your assets or how rich you are for there are people out there who will be plotting to steal it by lying, cheating, raping, beating, stabbing and burning your body to hide their con.

Read more about these here, here, and here.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Does criminals deserve human rights?

In his report, he alleged that during his interrogation on Sept 12, he was punched and beaten with a rubber hose. He also alleged a piece of wood was used to hit his private parts.

That was an excerpt from a NST report titled "Suspect says he was beaten in lock-up" dated 27th September 2010.

Compare that to what the heartless criminal had done to more than a dozen of his victims where his latest four victims had been raped (for the lady), beaten senseless, stabbed many times over, being lit on fire maybe when they are still alive and their ashes strewn in the nearby river.

Beating up criminals who does not give a damn about the human rights of their victims should be treated the same as they had treated their victim.

An average of one white-collar crime involving lawyers is being reported every day nationwide and the public are advised to consult the Bar Council before engaging any lawyer.

Federal Commercial Crimes Investigations Department (CCID) deputy director DCP Datuk Nooryah Md Anvar said from January till September this year, police have arrested 35 lawyers nationwide for 290 cases reported against them.

That was an excerpt from The Sun titled "Check with Bar Council on lawyers: Police" dated 27th September 2010.

Members of Bar Council are human beings and as human beings are prone to being criminals who will use their law knowledge to get away with the crimes they had committed using their knowledge.

There should be a new harsher law imposed especially for lawyers who are proven to be guilty for being criminals when they can manipulate their clients and cheat them out of their properties to the extend of murdering them without any mercy.

Murderers regardless of whether they are lawyers, when they commit murders, they should be hanged to death. If child abusers are hanged to death, so should white collar criminals who murder their victims.

Just because they are more educated than a taxi driver, why should they get away with murder?

However, one question that should be asked to the public is that, what will the public do to the accused if those criminals are let off by their criminal lawyers on technicality?

I mean, for me personally nowadays too, I am vigilant when I see Indians. Does anyone else feel that way? Thinking that when will that Indian rob them?

Torture is recommended for criminals

Read up on the article below taken from The History of CIA torture by Darius Rejali.

Ice Water and Sweatboxes

The long and sadistic history behind the CIA's torture techniques.

In the 20th century, there were two main traditions of clean torture—the kind that doesn't leave marks, as modern torturers prefer. The first is French modern, a combination of water- and electro-torture. The second is Anglo-Saxon modern, a classic list of sleep deprivation, positional and restraint tortures, extremes of temperature, noise, and beatings.

All the techniques in the accounts of torture by the International Committee of the Red Cross, as reported Monday, collected from 14 detainees held in CIA custody, fit a long historical pattern of Anglo-Saxon modern. The ICRC report apparently includes details of CIA practices unknown until now, details that point to practices with names, histories, and political influences. In torture, hell is always in the details.

The ice-water cure. "On a daily basis during the first two weeks I was made to lie on a plastic sheet placed on the floor which would then be lifted at the edges. Cold water was then poured onto my body with buckets. ... I would be kept wrapped inside the sheet with the cold water for several minutes. I would then be taken for interrogation," detainee Walid bin Attash told the Red Cross.

In the 1920s, the Chicago police used to extract confessions from prisoners by chilling them in freezing water baths. This was called the "ice-water cure." That's not its first use. During World War I, American military prisons subjected conscientious objectors to ice-water showers and baths until they fainted. The technique appeared in some British penal colonies as well; occasionally in Soviet interrogation in the 1930s; and more commonly in fascist Spain, Vichy France, and Gestapo-occupied Belgium. The Allies also used it against people they regarded as war criminals and terrorists. Between 1940 and 1948, British interrogators used "cold-water showers" as part of a brutal interrogation regimen in a clandestine London prison for German POWs accused of war crimes. French Paras also used cold showers occasionally in Algeria in the 1950s. In the 1970s, Greek, Chilean, Israeli, and Syrian interrogators made prisoners stand under cold showers or in cold pools for long periods. And American soldiers in Vietnam called it the "old cold-water-hot-water treatment" in the 1960s.

Cold cell. Abu Zubaydah, another detainee, says, "I woke up, naked, strapped to a bed, in a very white room. … [T]he cell and room were air-conditioned and were very cold." There, he was shackled to a chair for two to three weeks. "Cold cell" is one of six known authorized CIA interrogation techniques.


Since the 1960s, torturers have adapted air vents to put "the air in a state of war with me," in the words of one prisoner. In the first recorded case in 1961, guards at Parchman, Mississippi's state penitentiary, blasted civil rights detainees with a fire hose and then turned "the air-conditioning system on full blast" for three days. In 1965, detainees in Aden reported that British guards kept them "undressed in very cold cells with air conditioners and fans running at full speed." In other countries, interrogators have forced prisoners to stand or squat for long periods in front of blasting air-conditioning units or fans, as in South Vietnam (1970s), Singapore (1970s), the Philippines (1976), Taiwan (1980), South Africa (1980s), and Israel (1991 to present).

In a scene eerily similar to the CIA interrogation of Abu Zubaydah, South Vietnamese torturers held Vhuen Van Tai, the highest-ranking Viet Cong officer captured, in a windowless white room outfitted with heavy-duty air conditioners for four years. Frank Snepp, a CIA interrogator who interviewed him in 1972 in the room regularly, described Tai as "thoroughly chilled."

Water-boarding. Abu Zubaydah says that after he was strapped to a bed, "[a] black cloth was then placed over my face and the interrogators used a mineral water bottle to pour water on the cloth so that I could not breathe." If the contents of the mineral-water bottle were carbonated, this would be a well-known Mexican police technique (tehuacanazo), documented since the 1980s.* The Mexican signature mark is to mix in a little chili pepper before forcing the water down the nasal passage.

Water-boarding is not a technical term in torture, and reports have described several different water tortures under this name. The ICRC report puts to rest which kind the CIA used. It turns out to be the traditional "water cure," an antique Dutch technique invented in the East Indies in the 17th century. It migrated here after American troops returned from the Philippine insurgency in the early 20th century. By the 1930s, the water cure was favored by the Southern police. Interrogators tie or hold down a victim on his back. Then they pour water down his nostrils "so as to strangle him, thus causing pain and horror for the purpose of forcing a confession." Sometimes torturers cover the face with a napkin, making it difficult for the prisoner to breathe, as the ICRC report describes.

Sweatboxes and coubarils. Abu Zubaydah says, "Two black wooden boxes were brought into the room outside my cell. One was tall, slightly higher than me and narrow. … The other was shorter, perhaps only [3 feet 6 inches] in height." The large box, which Abu Zubaydah says he was held in for up to two hours, is a classic sweatbox. Sweatboxes are old, and they came into modern torture from traditional Asian penal practices. If you've seen Bridge on the River Kwai, you know the Japanese used them in POW camps in World War II. They are still common in East Asia. The Chinese used them during the Korean War, and Chinese prisoners today relate accounts of squeeze cells (xiaohao, literally "small number"), dark cells (heiwu), and extremely hot or cold cells. In Vietnam, they are dubbed variously "dark cells," "tiger cages," or "connex boxes," which are metal and heat up rapidly in the tropical sun.

Abu Zubaydah was also placed into the smaller box, in which he was forced to crouch for hours, until "the stress on my legs held in this position meant my wounds both in the leg and stomach became very painful." This smaller type of box was once called a coubaril. Coubarils often bent the body in an uncomfortable position. They were standard in French penal colonies in New Guinea in the 19th century, where some prisoners were held in them for 16 days at a stretch.

Both kinds of boxes entered American prison and military practice in the 19th century. They were a standard part of naval discipline, and the word sweatbox comes from the Civil War era. In the 1970s, prisoners described sweatboxes in South Vietnam, Iran (tabout, or "coffin"), Israel, and Turkey ("tortoise cell"). In the last three decades, prisoners have reported the use of sweatboxes in Brazil (cofrinho), Honduras (cajones), and Paraguay (guardia). And after 2002, Iraqi prisoners held in U.S. detention centers describe "cells so small that they could neither stand nor lie down," as well as a box known as "the coffin" at the U.S. detention center at Qaim near Syria.

Standing cells. Walid Bin Attash says, "I was put in a cell measuring approximately [3 feet 6 inches-by-6 feet 6 inches]. I was kept in a standing position, feet flat on the floor, but with my arms above my head and fixed with handcuffs and a chain to a metal bar running across the width of the cell." Over the last century, many prisons had built-in, tall, narrow, coffin-size cells, in which prisoners were forced to stand for hours, their hands chained to the ceiling. In the early 20th century, the women's prison in Gainesville, Texas, had a standing cell in the dining room so that prisoners could smell the food.

High-cuffing. Detainees routinely describe having their hands cuffed high above their heads while they stand with their feet on the ground. This is less damaging than full suspension by the wrists, which causes permanent nerve damage in 15 minutes to an average-size man. High-cuffing increases the time prisoners may be suspended, elongates the pain, and delays permanent injury. It is a restraint torture, as opposed to a positional torture, which requires prisoners to assume a normal human position (standing or sitting), but for a prolonged period of time.

High-cuffing is an old slave punishment of the Americas, once called "hanging from the rafters." John Brown, a free slave, said of it, "Some tie them up in a very uneasy posture, where they must stand all night, and they will then work them hard all day." American military prisons adopted the practice in World War I. High-cuffing was the standard prescribed military punishment for desertion, insubordination, and conscientious objection. Prisoners were handcuffed to their cell door eight to nine hours a day, in one case for up to 50 days. They described high-cuffing as excruciatingly painful, and the American public, otherwise unsympathetic with these prisoners, found the practice appalling, sparking a newspaper debate over "manacling" in November 1918. A month later, the War Department rescinded high-cuffing as a mode of punishment.

Towels, collars, and plywood. Sometimes torturers come up with something entirely new. "Also," says Abu Zubaydah, "on a daily basis during the first two weeks a collar was looped around my neck and then used to slam me against the walls of the interrogation room. It was also placed around my neck when being taken out of my cell for interrogation and was used to lead me along the corridor. It was also used to slam me against the walls of the corridor during such movements."

This is a novel approach to beating someone in a way that leaves few marks. For 30 years, I've studied a long and remorseless two centuries of torture around the world, and I can find only one instance of an account resembling the collars and plywood technique described in the ICRC report. It's American. During World War I, conscientious objectors in military prisons report that their guards dragged them like animals with a rope around the neck, across rough floors, slamming them into walls. This one, as far as I can tell, is entirely homegrown.


Monday, September 27, 2010

Police beating criminals happen all around the world

Police Beating

This is a must for all criminals. The harder the beating the better because they will disregard the safety of their victims and will kill them mercilessly.

Read more on the Torture and Democracy written by Derius Rejali describing the police torture techniques. If you don't want to be beaten like the criminals that they are, don't be one, okay?

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

When will we see justice served?

Ravi Nekoo, D.P. Vijandran and Pushpa Ratnam, lawyers defending Pathmanabhan A/L Nalliannen and his brother

3 lawyers had been appointed by the family of the accused of the brutal murder of Datuk Sosilawati Lawiya, 47, her driver Kamaruddin Shamsuddin, 44, lawyer Ahmad Kamil Abdul Karim, 32 and CIMB bank officer Noorhisham Mohammad, 38.

Some other 13 or more victims could suffer the same fate as the four victims.

The Bar Council which membership consist of those who will take opportunity to blast the police and the government any chance that they have when it comes to defending criminals. Read more here.

We can see the biased statement of them concerning issues of Kugan and also in this case where they will never blast a murderous criminal from the Indian race. The lawyer that had been the main suspect of this case is a member of the Bar Council too and the lawyers defending him are from Bar Council also.

We hope that these murderous unfeeling monsters (the 8 suspects who are Indians) will be charged swiftly and will be put to death by hanging quickly too because they had without remorse repeated their crimes since they had never been caught before.

S. Usharani, 24, the wife of a missing businessman A. Muthuraja from India will be holding a press conference tomorrow to reveal all on the two lawyer brothers.