Categories
Politics & government Science & technology

[1978] Of Twitter finally arrived in Malaysia

Away from the chaos on the streets of Ipoh and within the hall of Perak state assembly, a storm of short messages kept coming in, flashing and distributing the latest developments faster and wider than anything imaginable in the past.

Enter Twitter.

This is yet another sign of evolution within the already hyperactive Malaysian Internet community.

Truth be told, Twitter is not new among young techno-savvy Malaysians who are always ahead of the curve. Indeed, Twitter is a phenomenon in the US. In Malaysia itself, online press organizations like The Malaysian Insider, Nut Graph, Malaysiakini and even The Star Online do use Twitter.

Furthermore, its potential has been proven. For instance, in Moldova just weeks ago, Twitter played a crucial role in mobilizing a large successful protest against the Communist Party. In times of confusion as people kept wondering what was going on, Twitter was Mercury in that eastern Europe country.

Despite that, its importance did not impress too many Malaysians. That is, until May 7, 2009.

It started quite early in the morning. News of arrests was coming in but it came in slow through various blogs. Online news portals also were contributing but for them, extraordinary heavy traffic was taking its toll. Bandwidth demand spiked as demand spiked. Everybody wanted the latest news, even when there was none to be told.

People just kept refreshing like how that generation of gamers old enough to play the game Diablo on their computer kept clicking their mouse to whack on those devils running loose in a sprawling dark dungeon complex.

Multiple page reloads by thousands were beginning to frustrate both readers and administrations of portals alike. For bloggers, live blogging too was not enough. At the same time, Google Reader was amazingly relatively quiet when such an important event was unfolding in Ipoh.

For those on the ground, they needed something which they could post very quickly through their mobile application. Blogs just would not do. Forget about other more sophisticated content management systems. Those systems were too bulky.

“There has to be some other way to do this.”

That was probably what many were thinking. And yes, the answer is yes, there is.

Twitter is the way. It was time for live micro-blogging. Just type fewer than 140 characters into the Twitter account through any desktop, laptop or phone and Twitter will do everything else.

On Twitter, updates on Perak were up to the minute. It was more frequent than anything on any website. Those on Twitter were becoming the most well-informed observers of the May 7 fiasco, only next to those on the ground Twittering their tweets away to Twitter.

Oh, in case you were born yesterday, or rather, hundreds of years ago, tweets are Twitter updates. They are much like a post of a blog except shorter and crunchier.

From Twitter, messages were replicated across the Twitter universe, to Facebook, later to the blogosphere and online news portals.

Whatever the online media planned to publish — with the exception of their tweets — was yesterday news. And whatever news the mainstream media plans to print or broadcast was stale bread.

Twitter became more effective on May 7 when even state assemblymen and reporters began to Twitter. Information just flew freely and widely without censorship. At the manner information spread, those in power will really have to think twice about censorship. At one point, it appeared that even Kristie Lu Stout of CNN was following tweets by a reporter from The Edge.

After a while when the sitting in the Perak state assembly was adjourned for a second time by a new de facto Speaker and detained individuals released, those tweets slowed down a bit.

But it is not dead.

Twitter lies silently for the next big event, not unlike the black monolith in Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke’s “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

First published in The Malaysian Insider on May 9 2009.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

errata — the statement on Kristie Lu Stout might be inaccurate. While Stout does follow tweets from The Edge and that the reporter did tweet Stout, I cannot say with absolute certainty that Stout did follow the reporter’s tweets. I thank the reporter for clarifying the matter.

Categories
Politics & government

[1977] Of court verdict on MB case: Nizar won

Twitter has it that Nizar has won the court case!

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

CONFIRMED! NIZAR IS STILL MB!

IT IS ELECTION TIME!

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reservedMohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

In time when Nizar is the third most popular tag in Twitter…

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

…this is how PM Najib Tun Razak’s tweets look like:

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

Thanks to Lulu for the idea.

Categories
Economics

[1976] Of it is just as crowded over there

Read the mainstream press and it is hard to miss that the Economic Planning Unit and the Ministry of Finance are trying to market a new economic model to replace old ones. I fear that this new model is misguided and will lead Malaysia down the wrong path.

Read the mainstream press and one will find that it is popular these days to state that Malaysia needs to go up the economic value chain. Almost always accompanying that is rhetoric calling for Malaysia to graduate from its addiction to low-wage, low-skilled workers which, by and large, refers to dependency on cheap foreign labor.

Policy-wise, this has been translated into restriction on recruitment of cheap foreign labor. As proof, an astronomical levy on recruitment of foreign workers was imposed as part of the second stimulus package.

In time of economic slowdown, that particular action does not make sense and luckily, the Najib administration understands this and has decided to postpone it indefinitely. But even without a slowdown, that is no way to move forward due to uncertainty of any country’s development path.

Nonetheless, it is true that Malaysia needs to move up the value chain. We have been benefiting massively from early adoption of a liberal economy but other recently liberalized economies like India and China are finally catching up with Malaysia, and at an amazing pace.

Rapid reduction of poverty and continuous registration of high economic growth are testaments of how fast these countries are catching up after abandoning flawed economic models that ignore the importance of private property as a basis of a society.

Not only are they catching up rapidly thanks to liberalization, with their overwhelmingly larger and cheaper supply of labor, they are crowding out Malaysia and its peers like Thailand and the Philippines from the low-wage, low-skilled and labor-intensive niche. Penang, for instance, is already seeing multinational corporations migrating out from the state to Vietnam and China. This trend occurs because, among other reasons, of the availability of cheaper and larger supply of labor.

From this perspective, Malaysia is indeed losing its competitiveness; Malaysia is unable to compete in a low-wage model. If Malaysia fails to react, challenges from these low-cost countries have the potential to wreak havoc on the Malaysian economy. Fearing being pushed to the margin in the global market, Malaysia seems to be left with nowhere to go but up in the value chain.

Going up does not automatically mean actively restricting recruitment of cheap foreign labor, though. Cheap foreign labor still has roles in the Malaysian economy, even as its importance continue to diminish and even as other countries are able to excel at low-wage, low-skilled industry better than Malaysia.

This point is all the more tenable since in the long run, price equalization will happen to bring some kind of equilibrium between Malaysia and other competing countries.

The new equilibrium for low-wage, low skilled industry — perhaps especially for manufacturing — for Malaysia may be below its current level but the requirement for such industry will still exist since it provides goods or services which are hard if not impossible to trade. Somebody will have to do it.

Restriction on recruitment of cheap foreign labor is doubly unhelpful if the locals themselves refuse to take up low-wage low-skilled jobs. The restriction will create upward pressure on prices which include wages, pushing up the cost of living unnecessarily high when access to a large source of cheap labor to stabilize prices is available in the region.

In an open economy, that pressure will attract cheap supply of labor to act as a counterbalance. If that source is unavailable locally at the right prices, it will come from abroad.

That is already happening in Malaysia and the same trend is observable in the United Kingdom, where Eastern Europeans are taking up low paying jobs which the locals are reluctant to do as cheaply as the immigrants are willing. The same is true in the United States but instead of Eastern Europeans, they are from Mexico or other parts of Latin America.

A restriction on foreign labor will prevent that from happening, forcing prices and wages to go up. I feel this point must be stressed and hence, I repeat, that will inevitably cause the cost of doing business to increase.

The upward pressure on wages has been suggested as a tool to attract talents into Malaysia as an effort to take Malaysia forward beyond low-wage low-skilled economy into the realm of new economy.

This, however, confuses an increase in nominal wealth with an increase in real wealth. What is the point of being paid higher wages when the cost of living goes up accordingly, or higher?

In other words, the restriction which drives nominal wages up really makes no difference in real terms.

It must be noted that any increase in real wealth is largely due to productivity. This is not a mere opinion. Rather, it is an economic fact.

If one is less willing to believe mainstream economic theory due to the unfavorable popular reputation that economists currently suffer, then do refer to any econometric model on the matter; the correlation is strong and the causal relationship is enticing. Any effort at moving up the value chain must take this into account.

By moving up the value chain, it inevitably means greater application of science and innovation to increase productivity. A highly educated workforce will be required if the economy is to enjoy higher productivity.

In light of this, the question is not whether our addiction to cheap labor is a barrier to take the economy to a higher plane.

Instead, the questions that demand answers are: does Malaysia have a highly educated workforce; does Malaysia have the talents to fulfill the prerequisite of a high-value economy?

With a minority of its population holding a graduate degree and with an education system that seeks to brainwash its students rather than encourage critical thinking, it is a stretch to answer the questions in the positive.

That, by no means, is a reason to throw in the towel but it can help to refocus our energy from wrongfully vilifying low-skilled foreign labor to educating Malaysians better.

What is needed is an education system that demands the biggest effort from all. Schools, colleges and universities need to be liberalized to encourage development of competitive, thinking and open minded workforce, not yet more groups to be goaded for political purposes.

While these workforce is being developed, foreign talents should be welcomed and even offered citizenship.

Furthermore, just as the argument that low-cost giants are crowding Malaysia out from the low-wage, low-skilled niche, what actually guarantees that Malaysia can break into the high-value, high-skilled niche already filled with countries that with highly educated workforce?

Somehow, the rhetoric and the central planning action by the government which lead to curbs on foreign labor seems to suggest there is heavy competition in low-skilled industry but not in high-skilled industry.

”It’s crowded here, let’s move over there. Simple.” Well, it is not. While the pay off from a high-value economy is huge, it is naïve to think that there will be no competition.

Just imagine how much resources will be required to reverse the serious brain drain Malaysia has been experiencing for so long. Malaysia is way behind the curve in competition for talents. Compounding the issue is unfair practices by the government that make certain groups of Malaysia unappreciated.

If restriction of employment of cheap foreign labor is used as a stick to force Malaysia up the value chain, the danger is that Malaysia might fail to break into the high-skill niche and then finding itself with a largely dismantled low-skill industry.

With a serious lack of talent in the local economy, Malaysia might not only find itself entrenched in the middle-income trap, it might fall behind in comparison with its peers.

Unnecessary hostile position against cheap foreign labor might cause Malaysia to not have a fallback position if there is an error of judgment.

It is therefore, in my humble opinion, imperative that we ensure the ledge on the other side of the gully is properly secured before we make the jump across rather than chipping off the ledge we are still on. If we find ourselves in mid air only to realize that the ledge on the other side cannot support us, the next place we will be is at the bottom of the gully.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

First published in The Malaysian Insider on May 4 2009.

Categories
Activism Liberty

[1974] Of the Brickfields affairs II

This started to sound like a sequel to a movie but Wong Chin Huat was still there in lock-up and the pressure had to be maintained. Unfortunately, a smaller group of people joined this one compared to the day before although as the night progressed, more members of the society including politically prominent individuals started to show up as the whole affairs dragged well into the wee morning. By the time I left close to 03:00, it had not ended yet.

This time, the police was more polite the first time around, requesting those attending the vigil to disperse. “I would advise you to disperse”. This is very unlike Wednesday when an officer shouted like a mad man.

Polite or not, for the police, it did not work. Freedom of assembly is a natural right of every free citizen, especially so when the assembly is peaceful and pose no hazard to public safety. Given this stance which I think many at the vigil hold, the next chapter was written in stone. The polite officer resigned and a mad man took over. A number of people wearing black and holding lit candles were arrested when the mad man announced to the world of his arrival. Others, they were simply far enough to be out of reach of the officers. They lived to fight for another day, so to speak. Well, another hour actually.

Anyway, I was there early and I can tell you that those who were arrested were prepared to be arrested. “If they want to arrest us, let’s not run away. Let’s be arrested.”

I said to myself, yeah, right. Speak for yourself. I do not want to be detained. I am a chicken, with capital C.

So, they were in and some who were not taken in hang around farther down the road, waiting for something else to happen. Some began contacting people for help. Not long thereafter, legal counsels started to show up.

A friend much earlier joked about the itinerary of the whole affairs. Meet at 20:30 at Brickfields’ KFC restaurant, at 21:00 at the police station and 21:30 inside the lock-up. For those that got arrested, that was more or less the schedule.

Just like yesterday after the first arrest, the size of crowd started to swell again. Not close to the size of the day before not respectable enough to probably make the police nervous.

I sort of relish having a protest organized in front of a police district headquarters. Though the group was small yesterday, it showed a sign that civil society is willing to rise up, even at the doorstep of a lion’s den. Well, I am exaggerating but you know what I mean.

MP Loh Gwo-Burne showed up. And then state assembly person Elizabeth Wong. DAP assembly person Jenice Lee who was arrested earlier in Ipoh for the big party showed up too, I think. The last elected official that was there as far as I know was none other than the man himself, MP Tian Chua.

I do not remember who joked about this but somebody highlighted that on Wednesday, DAP was on duty. On Thursday, PKR. Maybe PAS would come on Friday.

On Wednesday, lawyers were allowed to go in. It was a different story for yesterday; the police was playing hardball. They simply did not want to let the lawyers to see the detainees. These lawyers apparently were young guns on-the-job training to handle emergency arrests. So, they were new and likely inexperienced. That is probably the reason why the police stood their ground rather well.

A senior lawyer was there and she refused to interfere since she wanted to get these young legal aid lawyers to gain some valuable experience.

For those arrested earlier, they were placed in an open space. There was a roof and the space was well-lit but it was open nonetheless.

Probably out of frustration not given access to legal counsel, the detainees started the best thing of all: protesting inside of police compound!

How about that?

If you cannot protest outside, protest inside. Haha!

They sang Negaraku and the crowd outside joined them in chorus.

That got the police angry and there was a commotion after that. Shouting match occurred. People outside who were still free were worried about the whole effect but in the end, nothing happened. It was just one of those harmless confrontations that put pressure on the police to release them.

The police did not buy that and instead, the detainees were relocated to rooms inside some building.

And, the second round of arrest came.

Saya bagi anda 3 minit untuk bersurai.”

Saya bagi anda 2 minit untuk bersurai.”

Satu minit.”

In a typical maniacal manner of a mad man, when time was up, he shouted, “Tangkap! Tangkap!

In retrospect, the episode was funny but when I was there, it was not as hilarious as I currently find it.

We left and decided that we should adjourned to a nearby eatery and come back later if the detainees continued to be detained. But some legal counsels on duty stayed behind and unfortunately, they were pull in by the police.

We only found out about this when we were happy drinking out tea and coke in a restaurant. The senior lawyer was fuming mad upon finding this out. Some of us thought the police were making a big mistake. I suppose, for the legal aid lawyers, they all got more than they bargained for.

Around midnight, we decided to return to the police station. More lawyers from the Bar Council came and they launched 5 police reports against the police.

Around this time, Tian Chua showed up. And god, he looked terribly tired but seemed ready to be arrested yet again in KL after being arrested in Ipoh earlier.

Nothing eventful happened after that. I was up close to 03:00 until I decided I needed my sleep.

The next day, heh, as in right now, hundreds of lawyers are protesting in front of the Jalan Duta Courthouse.

A domino effect is underway and we will see where will this lead us.

Categories
Politics & government

[1974] Of de facto usurping de jure

During one of those small discussions, Professor Khoo Kay Kim said something to the effect that de jure position is always the right position but de facto position can usurp de jure position.

Well…

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

Thank you Sinar Harian for the beautiful picture.

According to MP Jeff Ooi:

Little Birds told Screenshots that Najib’s boys have issued an order to the media not to publish any pictures that show Perak Speaker V. Sivakumar being forcibly dragged out of the state assembly this afternoon. [1Malaysia 2Peraks… Damage control. Screenshots. May 7 2009]

Spread it out people. Give them a black eye to reveal the farce of 1Malaysia.