Wednesday, July 21, 2010

NAJIB! AS PM WHO DO YOU LOVE?

LAST Friday a small band of us gathered in solidarity with SABM (Anak Bangsa Malaysia) at a bridge over Sg. Selangor and threw flowers into the river as a symbolic remembrance of the 1805 Malaysians who died in police cells or interrogation rooms.

1805 deaths over the years is not a small number and all snuffed out whilst under police custody is totally unacceptable. 1805 dead is equivalent to slaughter if not a massacre. Should the same fate befall the PM or the Police Inspector General whilst under police custody, we will also throw flowers into the river, this time, in protest against custodial deaths.

So what is this that I hear that a police report has been lodged in Putra Jaya against my comrade HARIS IBRAHIM? We now cannot even remember our dead rakyat.


YES! Tell us exactly what it is we are allowed to do! I love this country very much. I will fight for it and if given the opportunity I will willingly lay down my life for my country.

YES, I WILL DIE FOR MY COUNTRY BUT NOT FOR THIS GOVERNMENT.

WHY I WILL NOT DIE FOR THIS GOVERNMENT.

14 comments:

  1. whats next from this stalinist govt? Kosher?

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  2. Hey Bro Zor...just hot off the press, the Sydney Morning Herald! Thought you might be interested...
    Breakthrough in RBA corruption inquiry
    NICK MCKENZIE AND RICHARD BAKER
    July 22, 2010
    THE police investigation into alleged bribery by Reserve Bank of Australia subsidiaries has made a breakthrough, with an overseas witness providing details about alleged kickbacks to Malaysian officials.
    A Malaysian businessman was interviewed by anti-corruption authorities in Kuala Lumpur about his work as a middleman for the banknote firms Securency and Note Printing Australia between the late 1990s and 2007.
    The intelligence gained from the interviews has been sent to the Australian Federal Police taskforce investigating whether executives of the two companies breached anti-bribery laws due to their knowledge of payments made to foreign officials to help win banknote supply and printing contracts.
    The Reserve Bank owns half of Securency and all of Note Printing Australia. Bank-appointed directors are responsible for supervising the firms, including during the period when the alleged corruption occurred.
    A source aware of the work of the Malaysian authorities said the middleman had provided details about the $4 million in commissions he received from Securency and Note Printing Australia.
    The middleman was paid to help the firms win contracts with Malaysia's central bank.
    It is understood that at least one person closely connected to a senior Malaysian government official received kickbacks from the commissions.
    The middleman was engaged by the RBA firms due to his claimed high-level connections in the country's ruling UMNO political party. He has also been a broker for a Pakistani government weapons-making factory.
    The developments strengthen indications that the AFP probe could lead to Australia's first prosecution for bribery of an overseas official under changes to the Commonwealth Criminal Code made in 1999.
    The Herald reported last month that the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions had been asked to consider whether the federal police have sufficient evidence to lay criminal charges in connection to the case.
    The AFP Commissioner, Tony Negus, recently met a senior official from Malaysia's Anti-Corruption Commission and the pair are believed to have discussed the investigation.
    The Senior Deputy Commissioner of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), Han Chee Rull, told the Herald this year that his agency would assist the AFP.
    ''If the Australian police should provide us with information that certain Malaysians are involved in corruption offences in Australia, the MACC can conduct an investigation, even though the offence has taken place in Australia,'' Mr Chee Rull said.
    Securency has been under investigation by the federal police since May last year after the Herald revealed its large payments to foreign middlemen implicated in previous corruption scandals.
    The payments were often made into secretive offshore tax havens such as the Seychelles and Switzerland.
    Under Australian law, it is a criminal offence for companies or individuals to pay foreign officials in order to obtain a business advantage.
    The offence carries a maximum 10-year jail term and substantial fines.
    An external audit has found Securency paid $47.5 million in commissions to its network of agents between January 2003 and January last year.
    .........................
    Wonder if this is the same guy RPK mentioned in his blog about the affairs of "Scomi"?

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  3. I love my country, I dislike where its heading and I hate the morons steering us to more disasters.

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  4. Throwing flower in remembrance of the many who died under police custody is a crime, but throwing Teoh Beng Hock out the 14th floor as a warning to opposition parties is a heroic deed in the eyes of their masters?

    You know what Bernard. Some of us willfully and some other unwillingly with have to die one of these days to finally bring down this pathetic government if they ever instigate another riot when they lose the General Election. Hopefully the nation will awaken to the senseless killing before we turn into another Burma without ever finding a way back.

    Whatever the future holds, we sure are heading for bankruptcy on all fronts- financially, morally, intellectually and of course internationally. One thing we can be proud of is that no other country can compete with us in the Anal market. Our leaders just gifted in that department.

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  5. Surely you already know you can only hold any meetings in public with Government permission, either official or unofficial.

    And you have never questioned why no MSM had ever allowed memoriam notices for certain dates of the year? A certain day in May comes to mind.

    Anyway hungry ghosts are rumoured to roam soon. Maybe they will remind the guilty of their sins.

    Pax.

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  6. Lim Guan Eng's Penang government announces a 12% savings in operating expenditure, and yet, the PM's Office spends RM4 billion. So, who do you want to be running the show in Putrajaya?

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  7. Actually, the Malays have nothing to be proud of. We have to understand and accept our weaknesses. We are lacking in so many things. As I see it, the Malays are going backward. The Malay mind has to be revamped and re-programmed. We cannot go forward using the current mind-set.

    What can people like Ibrahim Ali help to advance the Malays? What happened to our government servants? Every decisions, however minor, has to be brought and decided by committees. What’s the use of sending them to Harvard, Cambridge, Oxford, etc? Where is the delegation of duties in the government? Even buying stationeries has to go to the committee. You can see the quality of Malay university professors talking on TV talk shows. They talk to please their hosts and to protect their positions, rather than truth and facts.

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  8. Big Cat, yes that was the two paragraphs introducing Datuk Sak's latest posting.

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  9. JIBBY IS ON BORROWED MANDATE TO RULE AND CHEAT THE RAKYATS WITH ALL HIS EXCESSES ALL HE CAN NOW, RM12 BILLION FOR PM DEPT, AND GOT NO BALLS TO PROVE HIS WORTH, NOT LIKE THE FIRST AUSTRALIAN LADY PRIME MINISTER WHO DARED TO ASKED FOR FRESH MANDATE OF HER OWN IN WITHIN 2 MONTHS OF TAKING OVER THE GOVERNMENT

    BASING ON THIS WE SHOULD ALL KNOW WHAT IS JIBBY AND HIS WHOLE REGIME OF CHEATING THE RAKYATS WITH ALL HIS EXCESSES IS WORTHY OF OK?

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  10. This is what BN goons do best!!
    Corruption and more corruptions...now even in distant shores!

    The businessman received RM11.3 million in commissions from two Australian companies to secure Malaysian government...

    Pink lips, money first, mooohyddin kerbau, melayu first...who cares for bolehland!

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  11. Oh dear.

    MU (devil) and Brazil (cross) jerseys will no longer be allowed for the Muslims.

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  12. where the numbers come from? miss the dot?

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  13. Jibby loves Lostma.

    Lostma loves De Niro.

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