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Ya..rancangan perumahan utk golongon
miskin pun wujud....
kalau betul dia buat salah sila tunjukkan
bukti....kita semua pun tak sokong
mana2
pemimpin yg songsang.....
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, June 26, 2005 10:35
PM
Subject: Re: Bismillah [hidayahnet] Who
is anwar? from BBC
Nak tambah lagi. Minggu lepas lupa. Perbankan Islam siapa yang
perkenalkan kalau bukan Anwar. Sebenarnya banyak lagi. Kita selalu lupa
sejarah tetapi sejarah tak pernah lupakan kita. [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED].
wrote:
Siapa kata dia tak buat apa-apa. Sistem pendidikan di Malaysia
melalui turning point beliau memperkenalkan KBSR dan KBSM. Walaupun tak 100%
berjaya tapi agak mantap. Silibus sekarang entah apa-apa. Masa beliau jadi
Menteri Pelajaran bahasa Melayu beliau cuba dipuncakkan Bahasa Melayu.
Sekarang apa nasib Bahasa Melayu? Siapa perkenalkan penerapan
nilai-nilai Islam dan nilai murni? Orang kata bos dia yang buat. Betul ke?
Jangan putarkan fakta. Penubuhan UIAM idea siapa? Idea beliau semenjak dalam
ABIM dan menjadi kenyataan bila beliau berada dalam kerajaan. Masa beliau
dikurung UIAM dirasmikan bagi menonjolkan supaya semua orang tengok UIAM
ditubuhkan oleh bekas bosnya. Semasa bekas bosnya cuti dan beliau memangku
jawatan PM beliau cuba bentangkan akta rasuah di parlimen. Tapi bosnya
telepon kata jangan, alasan "ramai orang tak suka". Kerana usaha beliau cuba
bongkar bermacam-macam penyelewenganlah maka beliau sengaja dicampak masuk
ISA. Nak bercakap tu bac alah sejarah sikit
oii! [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dulu dia ada kuasa - tapi tak dapat buat apa apa
dan sekarang dah tak ada
kuasa , macam macam nak buat . Ni politik yang paling saya tak suka .
//
*********************** Your mail has
been scanned by
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Fr yr reading pleasure..... Tks. Selva. District Sales Manager - Penang,
KUALA LUMPUR, Jun 6
(IPS) - Gone are the neck brace, the walking stick, the wheelchair and
the tired, exhausted look that was Anwar Ibrahim after 1998, when he
was sacked from the government and jailed for corruption and sodomy
after trials universally condemned as unfair.
The Anwar Ibrahim,
57, who walked onto the stage of a posh hotel here last week to speak
before a packed audience of supporters and foreign diplomats was a
picture of health. He was suave, confident, articulate -- and
attacking.
At the receiving end was retired prime minister Mahathir
Mohamad, his former mentor turned nemesis, who was accused of owning
larges stakes in media companies, of allowing rampant official
corruption and of responsibility for blatant human rights
abuses.
Former speaker of the Indonesian parliament Amien Rais and
Thai senator Kraisak Chunhavan also spoke at the function, a forum
on Political Reform in South-east Asia, giving Anwar's political
comeback plan added weight.
In Malaysia, corruption is endemic,
unemployment on the rise, police abuses go unchecked, and democratic
institutions have been weakened, insisted Anwar.
After several
weeks of recuperating upon his release -- after the country's highest
court acquitted him of sodomy charges -- and then several months in
Europe, the Middle East and America on the lecture circuit and as an
honorary academic at Oxford and Johns Hopkins universities, Anwar had
returned to re-launch his political career.
The charismatic former
deputy prime minister vowed to press ahead with 'reformasi' (reform)
and unite and strengthen the disparate opposition to face the
government o f Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi in general elections due
in 2008.
Anwar also toured the country, speaking at political
rallies to demand an independent investigation into the corruption of
past and present leaders.
He promised to bridge differences and
exploit common ground to unite the fundamentalist minded Pan Malaysian
Islamic Party (PAS) that wants to set up an Islamic theocracy in
multi-ethnic Malaysia with the Chinese-based opposition Democratic
Action Party (DAP), a secular group defending middle class
values.
All well and good, and while several thousand people
attended the forum and the rallies, Anwar's message did not go beyond
that select group of people who are already converted to his cause and
firm believers in reform.
For the general public, Anwar has
simply disappeared from the political scene. The reason is that the
government-controlled media, the only media allowed free rein in the
country, has completely blacked out the challenger.
"Has Anwar
sneaked back into the country?" was how a doctor reacted when this
reporter told him Anwar spoke at a forum on political reform.
"I
did not read it in 'The Star'," he said, referring to the
mass circulation English tabloid that because of strict controls
and censorship can truly boast that, "If we did not report it, it did
not happen."
Anwar has been transformed from an establishment
figure whose every word was dutifully reported into an opposition icon
whose every move must be assiduously ignored.
No editor dares
violate the government order to black him out and with it in place,
Anwar faces an uphill task in making his plans known and his presence
felt. While the alternative media and Internet based news websites like
Malaysiakini.com give prominence to his campaign, their reach is
short.
Privately editors have been told that Anwar is a security
threat b ecause he would split the majority Malay community, whose
unity and well-being is the bedrock of stability in this multi-ethnic
society.
"The instruction is preferably not to report and otherwise
report the inconsequential aspects in the inside pages," a veteran
journalists told IPS, requesting anonymity.
In the vernacular
newspapers read by the Malay voters Anwar needs to win over, he is
portrayed as a traitor to the race.
"He is a traitor, he ruined the
economy and shamed the Malay race," is a common and often repeated
refrain.
It is not difficult to block news about Anwar or -- the
other side of the coin -- to unfairly attack him, because the country's
newspapers and television stations are directly or indirectly owned by
political parties in the ruling 14-party National Front
coalition.
"We are like government servants -- there is no room to
disobey in the first place," said the journalist.
Malaysian
universit ies and Malaysian students abroad are also warned against
attending lectures given by Anwar on pain of losing
their scholarships.
In addition, election laws also work against
the politician. Because of the corruption conviction he is barred from
holding office or contesting in elections until 2008.
This law
can only be circumvented if the king grants a pardon. But Anwar has
refused to ask for one, arguing it would be an admission
of guilt.
"I am the victim and totally innocent," he has
repeatedly said. But his supporters, some of them very senior retired
civil servants, submitted a petition to the king in May to grant the
pardon.
Political analysts say there is little chance of that
happening because even if the monarch is amenable, the constitution
says he must act on the advice of the government. Many veteran
government ministers, many of whom remain loyal to Mahathir, are
implacably against a pardon for Anwar.
(Mahathir had groomed
Anwar as his successor but turned on him after 1998 when Anwar
questioned his policies and spoke out against
official corruption).
To Anwar's inner circle the real obstacle
to his comeback is public perception of the challenger after seven
years of relentless government propaganda, first under Mahathir and now
under Abdullah, portraying Anwar as the very incarnation of Satan,
indecent, guilty of many crimes, corrupt, a sexual deviant and an
Islamic fanatic.
Weighed down by such a negative general perception
and facing official harassment, unfavourable election laws and a
thorough media blackout, Anwar has a mountain stacked against his
comeback plans.
Even an open invitation last week from PAS inviting
him to join the party and lead the opposition is a doubled-edged
sword.
"Fundamentalist minded Muslims are overjoyed but moderates
are unhappy with the invitation. Non-Muslims must be terrified," an
academic analyst told IPS.
More than 40 percent of Malaysians
are non-Muslims and previously voted against any political party allied
with PAS.
Despite the formidable obstacles, Anwar vows to return.
"I am a Malaysian, this is my home," he said recently. "I have
returned, don't count me out."
Despite that enthusiasm, it
remains an open question whether Anwar can regain his former pole
position in Malaysian
politics.
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