Betoi tuh... ada tambahan lagi
* Idea penubuhan Pusat Islam
* Pelopor sistem perbankan Islam di Bank2 konvensional
* Ketika menjadi Menteri Kewangan ; sebelum kegawatan
melanda , pertumbuhan ekonomi berada pada 6 %
setahun, diikuti dgn 7 % pada tahun berikutnya.
( Sekarang ekonomi tak menentu , malah bertambah
teruk dari ketika Anwar jadi TPM & MOFinance )
* Menaikkan interest kad kredit; utk tidak
menggalakkan
rakyat Malaysia berhutang
* dan macam-macam lagi.........tak habih nak cerita
--- [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 bacalah 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 InterScan.
> ***********-***********
>
>
>
> 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 of 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
> because 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 universities and Malaysian students abroad
> are also warned
> against attending lectures given by Anwar on pain of
> losing
=== message truncated ===
Ahmad Fadzli bin Ahmad Saleh
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