Categories
ASEAN Economics Liberty

[706] Of Cambodian dictatorship and ASEAN

Malaysia and several other ASEAN members have been criticizing Myanmar for the latter’s lack of meaningful democratic progress. To the southeast beyond Thailand, lies Cambodia with a dictator is in the making. Despite Cambodia’s alarming progress towards dictatorship, ASEAN leaders are yet to say a word about it.

For the past few days, Cambodian government have been arresting Cambodians critical of the government on the ground of defamation. The arrest has sparked condemnation from several organization, including Amnesty International. AI in its press release accuses the Cambodian government of manipulating Cambodian courts. The New York Times in one of its articles says that this is not an isolated incident. Opposition leaders and others have been arrested by the government. This makes these arrests as a part of a larger erosion of freedom in Cambodia:

Cambodian Leader Cracks Down in Bid to Solidify Power
By SETH MYDANS
Published: January 9, 2006

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Jan. 8 – The harshest political crackdown in years is under way here in what some analysts are calling the final stage in Prime Minister Hun Sen’s drive to consolidate unchallenged power.

Over the past year, he has choked off the last effective political opposition while continuing to marginalize the monarchy, manipulate the courts and intimidate labor unions and other civic groups. In December, the leader of the only significant opposition party, Sam Rainsy, who had already fled the country, was sentenced in absentia to 18 months in prison for criminal defamation.

Now, with a series of arrests and lawsuits on defamation and related charges, Mr. Hun Sen is for the first time directly attacking the human rights groups that, by default, serve as a de facto democratic opposition…

ASEAN has a unique role to apply pressure against Cambodia. The 10-member confederation could admonish the Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and perhaps, put a check on current Cambodian political atmosphere. But it is not doing so and I think I know why they are silent on the matter.

ASEAN takes pride of its non-interference policy but it makes an exception for Myanmar thanks to US and EU initiative. Unlike Myanmar, the European Union and United States are not pushing ASEAN to deal with Cambodia accordingly. With no outside push, ASEAN seems happy to stay away from making a comment on its members. Well, I think it’s just wrong and ASEAN needs to make a statement on Cambodia.

The reason for such need is simple – it’s the ASEAN Charter which guarantees human rights. Though the Charter has yet to be drafted, this is a chance for ASEAN to prove to the world and more importantly, to its own citizens that the charter will not be just another piece of paper. If ASEAN fails to speak up against Cambodia, it will be harder to deal with such case in the future even when the Charter is in place.

Then, of course, besides the lack of outside pressure, another reason why ASEAN is not doing anything about the issue is because its more prosperous members, particularly Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand, are not quite saints when it comes to human rights.

p/s – Volkswagen ends partnership with Proton. So, Proton is going to keep Lotus after all.

Categories
Activism

[705] Of reviving ReMag

At ReCom.org, it’s usually a style to add Re- in front of everything. It’s all about ReCom, ReCommend, ReMag. And now, it’s about reviving ReMag. If I may be lame, which I am most of the time, it’s ReMag: ReVival.

ReMag was a little project by ReCom.org. An online magazine with articles written by Malaysians. It started two years ago but five editions later, it suffered a slow death. ReMag 6 was supposed to go out on December 2005 but it didn’t. It was because for ReMag 6, we tried to run the project on a new model but the model collapsed under its own weight – contributions started to dry up as prospective authors accused ReMag editors as a bunch of elitists. The project’s theme itself was considered of being too serious by many outside of ReMag editorial board. Hackers’ attack on ReCom.org killed off everything that was left, including the archives. For more than six months now, ReMag has been a mere blank page.

A few days ago, effort to revive the project started to pick up. For some reasons, people became excited about it all over again. One of the people is me – I found myself in the project once again. The aim right now is to gather old editors that worked for us and find new ones. More importantly, it’s time to solicit Malaysians to write for ReMag yet again.

When ReMag was up and running, it was healthy. Surpisingly too, it was popular. I didn’t know that until the project died out. At the same time, there was no competitor. Currently however, I could think of two competitors out there – one is theCicak and the other is inkyhands. The best thing is, some people at ReCom recognize most people at theCicak and inkyhands due to previous networking. So, fun.

Now. If you are interested in contributing to ReMag, please mail me at mnoorsha [at] umich [dot] edu. There’s no preset topic and you are free to send anything worthy of read. If you are interested in being an editor or are able to findle with technical details and able to write in HTML, PHP or mess around with CMS, mail me too. For more information, visit ReCom.org.

So, ReMag. Coming soon at www.ReMag.org.

Categories
Environment Kitchen sink Photography

[704] Of cat attack due to ammonia!

As in right now, there are just too many cats around me.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

Cute but too many nonetheless. And they are starting to get on my fragile nerves. I think I’ll cook some for dinner. Wait, I can’t cook. Oh well. Life is just an experiment and so is cooking. Yeah. A sacrifice for Eid. Muahahaha. Alright. I’m getting a bit crazy. Too much ammonia, you know. It might affect sanity, sometimes.

LABIS: More than 300 people overcome by ammonia fumes caused by a chemical reaction at a nearby illegal dumpsite fled their homes yesterday.

The gas prompted residents living near Sungai Gatom to evacuate their homes.

Haha, I still remember that it’s NH3! Or was that ammonium?

I wonder how a cat meat would taste like when cooked with ammonia. Won’t be too kind to the tongue I presume. You’ll never know until you try, eh? Let’s do it.

Lame and not funny.

Categories
Liberty Society Sports

[703] Of real Devils worshippers are not black metal fans!

So yeah, some narrow minded and paranoia people in local authority arrested hundreds of people for attending a black metal show near Kuala Lumpur about last week. Moral police that have nothing else to do but masturbate on their supposedly moral superiority, instead of using it on real crime, used up precious police resources to harrass black metal fans. These moral police insist that those fans are worshipping the devils. Well, moral police are wrong. They are attacking the wrong group.

How do I know? In The Star today:

scanned by Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Fair use.

Moral police should act against the real Devils worshippers. This cult must be stopped immediately!Our hope in stopping these misguided souls that also pray to manure now lies in the hand of our heroes the moral police! Moral police! We need you!

Praise Burton Albion for doing God’s work in holding the Devils down. This might give time for Malaysian moral police to get their act together!

Manchester United fans, watchout. Believe it or not, you might be next.

p/s – alert, alert! Stupid moral police on the loose. Kosmo! editors and the article’s author need to resign on ground of stupidity.

Categories
Economics Environment Politics & government Sports

[702] Of statism and Malaysia Airlines

Yesterday, Malaysia Airlines’ (MAS) new managing director, Idris Jala announced that MAS will move out of its headquarters in Kuala Lumpur in effort to cut cost. This might signal an eventual sale of the building. Today, Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister made known that the government won’t interfere with MAS operation. This is good news.

Several weeks ago, when Idris Jala brought up the possibility of selling MAS HQ building in Kuala Lumpur, politicians, some senators from the Dewan Negara and other old dogs were up in arms, harping at Idris Jala for even considering the matter. After all, MAS is Malaysia’s national air carrier, much like how Proton is Malaysian national car manufacturer. It’s national pride and the sale of MAS building could dent that pride. Hence, their reaction is comprehensible. Their opposition however is irrational.

Pride rarely has a place in business, especially when it gets tough. More often than not, a person, an entity or whatever has to swallow its pride and get on with it. What’s better or the best option won’t necessarily feed one’s ego. MAS is facing this dilemma and Idris Jala realizes this. He deserves respect for simply being able to perceive the scenario and look beyond pride. The politicians that disagree with Idris Jala deserve a kick for putting too much emphasize on pride.

The government should mostly do what it does best and that is governing. Government intervention on MAS is unneeded and unwanted. Malaysian government should learn something from Singapore Airlines – the firm, despite being linked to the government, must be free to work out its own strategy.

Pride won’t save MAS and neither will politicians that oppose the sale. These politicians are a bunch of statists. Do we really expect these statists to know more about MAS than the managing director himself?

No. Unless, if the politicians themselves have proper background in business. But that’s rarely the case, isn’t it?

p/s – the price of internalizing pollution – over USD 3 billion.

China will invest 26.6 billion yuan (US$3.28 billion; EUR2.69 billion) over the next five years to clean up the Songhua River, a key source of drinking water for tens of millions of people that was polluted in November by a toxic spill that reached into Russia, reports said Sunday.

That amount doesn’t even reflect full cost accounting. Imagine what the figure would look like with full cost accounting. Already, a third spill is in progress.

BEIJING (AFP) – A third major toxic spill in China in as many months has threatened water supplies to millions of residents of two central cities, officials and state media have said.

A clean-up accident allowed industrial chemical cadmium, which can cause neurological disorders and cancer, to flood out of a smelting works and into the Xiangjiang River in Hunan province on January 4, Xinhua news agency said Sunday.

If things go as they are going at the moment, the PRC might just overtake the US as an environmental devil.

pp/s – and Michigan goes unranked for the second time in six months. Bravo Carr!