Categories
Books, essays and others History & heritage

[1097] Of purchasing books liberally

It is Chinese New Year and I got myself more books. I did not mean to purchase anything in the first place. The act was impulsive especially when I have yet to finish up the previous books that I bought earlier. In fact, I am still reading The Origin of Wealth. Furthermore, I have not even started on Clinton’s My Life and Dawkins’ The God Delusion. Yet, here I am, supporting the economy by spending.

At first, since I was in the vicinity of Kinokuniya under the majestic Petronas Twin Towers, I thought I could do with a browse. Alas, temptation got the best of me.

I found myself in the history section. For some reason, I wanted to read more about Srivijaya. It was kind of hard to find a book on the ancient Malay kingdom which in my opinion is greater than the Malay Sultanate of Malacca. If the Malays wanted to look for something to build their pride on, they should look beyond Malacca and embrace the Srivijayan. At the very least, acknowledge Srivijaya as a kingdom as great as Malacca.

Despite the size of the store, its collection is limited. I could not find a specific book on Srivijaya.

Nevertheless, Hugh Clifford’s Farther India looked promising. For those that score F for history without fail, Clifford was one of the more important colonial administrators of British Malaya. He was also one of those foreign administrators that fell in love with the Malays and Malaya, just like Frank Swettenham. At Cambridge Journals, the phrase “doyen of the colonial service” is attributed to Clifford.

The synopsis describes Farther India as one of the most important publications on Southeast Asian history. Yet, it seems to me that the book is concentrating on mainland Southeast Asia and talks about European explorations and discoveries of old Southeast Asian civilizations. I suspect the book does not talk much about Srivijaya. So, when I saw Paul Michel Munoz’s Early Kingdoms of the Indonesian Archipelago and the Malay Peninsula, it placed Clifford’s back on the shelf and grabbed Munoz’s instead.

While on my way out of the history section, I stumbled upon a book entitled British Malaya. That book directly reminded of an article at Wikipedia of the same name that I have been working on for more than a year. I thought this particular book might help me finish up what I started. So, book number two.

While on my way out of the store, somehow, Sophie’s World came across my mind; I made it as my third book.

And so, right now, five books await the completion of The Origin of Wealth. The pressure is now on me.

Ah… the curse of purchasing books liberally.

Categories
Politics & government

[1096] Mengenai kemungkinan pembubaran Parlimen dalam masa terdekat

Di muka hadapan Utusan Malaysia hari ini:

Scanned by Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Fair use. Copyrights by Utusan.

Ingat lagi laporan Reuters beberapa hari lepas?

Categories
Environment

[1095] Of little battles in the Southern Ocean

In the Southern Ocean where the whales swim, amid tussle between Japanese whalers and conservationists, the Japanese whaling factory ship Nisshin Maru is on fire:

Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) — A sailor is missing after a fire broke out on board a Japanese whaling vessel sailing off the coast of Antarctica, New Zealand’s maritime authority said.

Most of the crew of the Nisshin Maru was evacuated to other vessels in the Japanese government-run fleet and about 20 sailors remaining on board brought the fire under control, said Steve Corbett, a spokesman for Maritime New Zealand.

With a crew missing and the ship incapacitated by fire in the rough open sea, the Japanese has called for helped. The Greenpeace’s Esperanza is responding to the distress signal and this is the third distress call it responded to in six days.

Earlier, there were clashes between the Japanese whaling fleet and Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Sea Shepherd has been the most aggressive conservationist group so far as far as this whaling season is concerned. Its ship, the Robert Hunter and Japanese whaling Kaiko Maru, which was hunting whales in the Southern Ocean whale sanctuary, collided:

Anti-whaling activists say one of their vessels and a Japanese whaling ship have collided near the Ross Sea, sparking a distress call from the Japanese crew.

Each side is blaming the other for the collision:

The two sides blamed each other for the clash near Antarctica late on Monday which holed a Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship, the Robert Hunter.

According to The Age:

In nearly 20 years of protest against Japanese whalers, there have been other clashes on the water. But never has such a determined attempt been made to disable the fleet.

The small US-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and its 60-odd black-clad activists upped the ante this week to the point that Greenpeace, the whalers’ usual foe, now risks being seen as ineffectual.

There is a decade-old moratorium on whale hunting in the area but the international ban is being practically ignored by Japan. Also this week, Japan unsuccessfully organized a forum aimed to undo the moratorium:

Only 35 of the IWC’s 72 members took part in the meeting, with 26 anti-whaling countries, including the US, Britain and Australia, deciding to stay away. Their boycott drew an angry reaction from the pro-whaling nations, which accused them of “imperialism”.

The oddest about the clashes is that, when it involves human lives, the whales and the conservationists are helping each other out. For instance, during an earlier skirmish between Sea Sheppard and Nisshin Maru when two members of the former were missing, both declared truce and directed their effort into searching for the missing persons. Call it tragic comedy in the high seas but:

Two missing Sea Shepherd activists have been found safe in the Antarctic, and hostilities have resumed against the Japanese whaling fleet.

Sea Shepherd ships have since gone back to port for refuelling.

Of all distress signals, the third latest is probably the most serious. Not only there is fire on board Nisshin Maru, the ship stranded and a sailor missing, it is possible that the ship might be drifting to the world’s biggest Adelie penguin colony at Cape Adare, Antarctica, causing environmental damage through oil leakage. Greenpeace’s Esperanza is ready to aid the stranded ship and tow it to port. The Japanese however disagrees with theat assessment:

“There’s no threat of oil leakage at all, and no worries over environmental pollution from the Nisshin Maru,” said Kenji Masuda, of the Fisheries Agency.

And refusing Greenpeace’s offer:

A spokesman for the Tokyo-based Institute of Cetacean Research (ICR), which is carrying out the whaling, said other ships in the fleet could tow it from the area if required.

According to Defending Our Ocean, Esperanza has reached Nisshin Maru. There are several other ships nearby, including the US Coast Guard ship Polar Sea.

My take?

The whalers should just take up the offer and cut the season short.

In any case, Greenpeace’s conservation mission has turned into a rescue mission.

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

p/s — the body of the missing person has been recovered.

Categories
Conflict & disaster Earthly Strip

[1094] Of Earthly Strip: Four years of credible intel

There has been talk that the Bush administration might conduct an airstrike — or something greater in force — against Iran. I do think that the President is building a case in that direction. In the New York Times earlier:

WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 — President Bush said Wednesday that he was certain that factions within the Iranian government had supplied Shiite militants in Iraq with deadly roadside bombs that had killed American troops. But he said he did not know whether Iran’s highest officials had directed the attacks.

Mr. Bush’s remarks amounted to his most specific accusation to date that Iran was undermining security in Iraq. They appeared to be part of a concerted effort by the White House to present a clearer, more direct case that Iran was supplying the potent weapons — and to push back against criticism that the intelligence used in reaching the conclusions was not credible.

I think:

Some rights reserved by Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Photo of President Bush by NYT. Copyrights by NYT. Fair use.

Pardon me while I burst…

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[1093] Of RM46 billion vote of confidence? I have questions instead…

In the NST today:

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia is back on the global investment map. A record RM46 billion was invested in 1,077 approved manufacturing projects last year by local and foreign investors, a 48 per cent jump from the RM31 billion invested in 2005.

The keyword is “approved“. A more important question is, how much was actually committed?

The article is comparing approved investment in 2006 against actual investment in 2005. Why the article does not compare approved investment in 2006 with approved in 2005? Or, why the article does not compare actual investment in 2006 with actual investment in 2005?

Further, it is more likely that the figures are nominal figures. An honest analysis would use real figures for comparison purpose.

Let us compare oranges to oranges, apples to apples.

More from the article:

Domestic investments amounted to RM25.8 billion, making up 56.1 per cent of the total approved investments, compared with RM13.1 billion or 42.2 per cent in 2005.

I wonder, how much of the RM25.8 approved domestic investment are actually approved investment related to the government?

The answer should be compared against the outcome of Mundell-Fleming model.

Another question is, how does Malaysia perform against our neighbors? Regionally?

Finally, from Reuters (via):

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – Malaysia’s media has been trumpeting good news about the economy, and that is stoking speculation of an early election this year.

Hmm….