Apa khabar sahabat?

Saya nak sampaikan 2 berita gembira untuk anda hari ini..


Pertama sekali, saya ingin mengucapkan Selamat Menyambut Tahun Baru 2012. 
Semoga tahun ini akan akan membuatkan lebih berjaya dari tahun 2011.


Tahun baru, azam pun baru.. Sudahkan anda menetapkan azam untuk tahun 2012 ini? 
Kalau belum, setkan azam anda segera yer..


Baiklah sahabat..


Pernahkan anda menjana pendapatan di internet pada tahun lalu? Kalau belum, 
mahukah anda saya tunjukkan kaedah paling mudah nak jana RM 50 pertama anda 
untuk tahun 2012 ini?


Oleh itu, berita baik yang kedua ialah, saya nak maklumkan bahawa sahabat saya 
Affendi Hussin baru sahaja memberikan satu laporan percuma bagaimana nak buat 
duit RM 50 dalam 24 jam..


Ianya percuma sahaja...
 

=>> http://www.hyperfanpage.com/hop.php?ref=umar


Saya dah pun membaca laporan percuma tersebut, dan ianya sememangnya laporan 
yang WAJIB dimiliki oleh sesiapa sahaja nak buat di internet..


Saya sarankan anda untuk dapatkannya di:


=>> http://www.hyperfanpage.com/hop.php?ref=umar


Download segera sebelum ia ditutup pemberiannya.. 




Ikhlas,

Ahmad 




________________________________
 From: badiuzzaman <[email protected]>
To: Islah-Net <[email protected]> 
Cc: ISHAK ali <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, March 3, 2012 12:57 AM
Subject: Re: [Islah-Net] LYNAS: Antara Fakta dan Auta
 

  


SEMUA kemusykilan tentang status dan tahap 
keselamatan sisa Lynas yang ditimbulkan semula 
oleh SM Mohamed Idris dalam artikel di bawah 
telah dijawab dalam posting-posting yang saya 
hantar pada bulan Disember 2011 dalam Islah-Net.

Please don't waste your time, my time and other 
peoples' time by re-telling and repeating all the lies..

At 2/3/2012 09:50 PM, ISHAK ALI wrote:

>
>Radioactive waste dump in Malaysia a super 
>subsidy for Lynas — SM Mohamed Idris
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>March 02, 2012
>MARCH 2 — In recent days, we have heard the 
>authorities giving contradictory signals 
>regarding the disposal of radioactive waste from Lynas Corp’s Gebeng refinery.
>According to the health minister, Lynas would be 
>told to move the radioactive wastes outside of 
>Kuantan or ship these back to Australia. This 
>was the agreement reached by him and the 
>ministers of International Trade and Industry, 
>Science, Technology and Innovation, and Natural Resources and Environment.
>Four days on, February 26, the prime minister 
>said that the radioactive wastes would be dumped 
>far away from residential areas.
>Another two days later, February 28, the public 
>was told that the four ministries had decided to 
>store the radioactive waste in Malaysia and a possible site had been found.
>The following day, the Green Technology, Energy 
>and Water minister said that the Cabinet had not 
>given up on sending back the radioactive waste to Australia.
>In fact, the impression given was that Malaysia 
>was mulling over the option of whether to 
>actually send the radioactive waste from Lynas back to Australia.
>This being the case, we are wondering why the 
>Malaysian government had not thought of getting 
>Mitsubishi, the company that produced 
>radioactive waste in the Asian Rare Earth (ARE) 
>factory in Bukit Merah, Perak over 30 years ago, 
>to send its wastes back to Japan.
>It is still not too late as the radioactive 
>waste may continue to contaminate our 
>environment and pose a threat to Malaysians for 
>countless generations, thanks to the apathy of 
>the government (and Atomic Energy Licensing 
>Board). If the government thinks that it can 
>ship radioactive waste back to Australia, we are 
>sure that the same could have been done for the ARE waste.
>If the government had done this earlier, we 
>would not be burdened with having to deal with 
>these radioactive wastes with a half-life of 
>13.9 billion years. In other words, we are now 
>left with having to manage radioactive waste 
>that will remain radioactive forever.
>This was a stupendous subsidy for Mitsubishi 
>(and Japan). The radioactive waste left behind 
>is a source of contamination to our soils, 
>forests, water systems and the air. (Thorium, 
>when it decays, produces radioactive radon gas 
>that can be carried for long distances, 
>generously covering the air Malaysians breathe).
>These are enormous liabilities to Malaysia, our 
>ecosystems and our health and safety. The damage 
>to our land, forests, waters and air and the 
>costs to the health of Malaysians is 
>incalculable. These future costs were never 
>factored in when Mitsubishi was allowed to 
>operate. In the absence of knowledge about 
>future risks and costs, the government (AELB) 
>decided it was a golden investment opportunity. 
>Mitsubishi took the profits home and left this 
>toxic legacy that will last for billions of years — or forever.
>Despite the fact that work has begun on an 
>underground storage system (at the cost of over 
>RM300 million), there is no guarantee that this 
>underground storage of some 80,000 200L drums of 
>radioactive wastes from the ARE factory will 
>remain geologically stable for the next 100 years, let alone 1000 years.
>Bear in mind that Malaysia is made up mainly of 
>limestone, which is highly porous, unstable and 
>prone to erosion, making it very unsuitable for 
>the storage of long-lived radioactive wastes. 
>Climate change, tsunamis, earthquakes, the 
>recent unprecedented floods and natural 
>disasters should serve as a clear warning. 
>Should any disaster occur, Malaysian taxpayers will have to foot the bill.
>The ARE factory in Bukit Merah was underwritten 
>with enormous public subsidies where all the 
>risks and costs were socialised and borne by 
>Malaysia and its present and future generations.
>Allowing Lynas to dump its radioactive wastes on 
>Malaysian soil will be the sweetest ultimate 
>subsidy of all. This is on top of the tax-free 
>billions that it will reap as profits. Note that 
>Lynas’s rare earths production will be ten times 
>more than that produced at the ARE factory, thus 
>the wastes level will be immense. If the damages 
>and costs are not addressed by the authorities, 
>they will be burdening future generations of 
>Malaysians with radioactive wastes they had no part in creating.
>As it is, the annual US$10 million (RM30 
>million) that Lynas will pay Malaysia for five 
>years beggars belief. It is farcical that the 
>economic, social, environmental and health costs 
>to the workers, communities, the land, forests, 
>soils, waters, seas, and future generations are 
>seen as amounting to just US$50 million.
>Allowing Lynas to dump its radioactive wastes in 
>Malaysia forever is indefensible.
>* SM Mohamed Idris is president of the Consumers 
>Association of Penang and Sahabat Alam Malaysia
>
>
>
>----------
>To: [email protected]
>From: [email protected]
>Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2012 18:48:15 +0800
>Subject: [Islah-Net] LYNAS: Antara Fakta dan Auta
>
>
>
><http://reformasin.blogspot.com/2012/02/lynas-antara-fakta-auta.html>http://reformasin.blogspot.com/2012/02/lynas-antara-fakta-auta.html
>
>Selepas selesai solat Jumaat di Masjid Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah II di
>Kuantan saya jumpa risalah "LYNAS: Antara Fakta dan Auta" diterbitkan
>oleh Ikatan Anak Muda Pahang diletakkan di cermin hadapan kereta.Hari
>ini bila buat carian di internet, risalah tu dah ada rupanya di sana.
>
>Selamat Membaca!!


 

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