Showing posts with label Press Freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Press Freedom. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

[Video] Bomoh: Penipuan, Fitnah dan Sikap Tidak Patriotik @DrWanAzizah wajar diselar! #PRKKajang


Komander Angkatan Tentera Laut AS, William Marks puji Malaysia dan 
Search and Rescue (SAR) Team Malaysia


Hakikat sebenar kekuatan pasukan negara-negara di dalam SAR Team MH370, Tidak ada sebarang kenyataan dan maklumat rasmi bahawa Kerajaan Malaysia menggunakan bomoh dalam SAR Team MH370


Selain itu para pemimpin UMNO/BN turut mengadakan solat hajat bagi memohon kepada Allah swt agar penumpang dan anak kapal MH370 dapat ditemui dalam keadaan selamat


Malangnya, di sebalik pujian Komander Angkatan Tentera Laut Malaysia, jumlah kekuatan anggota SAR yang diumumkan secara rasmi oleh kerajaan Malaysia, solat hajat oleh pemimpin-pemimpin UMNO/BN, ada sejenis makhluk yang menipu dan memfitnah UMNO, BN dan kerajaan Malaysia. Makhluk ini juga mempersenda pasukan SAR Malaysia, dengan mengatakan "Malaysia guna bomoh". Penipuan dan fitnah yang dilakukan langsung tidak konsisten dengan imej bertudung yang beliau peragakan selama ini.

Kenyataan ini dibuat oleh wan Azizah dalah salah satu daripada ceramah dalam kempen Pilihan Raya Kecil Kajang. Berita ini pada mulanya disiarkan oleh Malaysian Insider, namun didakwa oleh sesetengah pihak telah dipadam mungkin kerana mahu melindungi Wan Azizah..




Perbuatan menipu dan memfitnah serta sikap tidak patriotik Wan Azizah wajar diselar. Kerajaan Malaysia juga wajar mengambil tindakan undang-undang ke atas Wan Azizah di atas penipuan yang dilakukan serta sikap tidak patriotik dan penghinaan terhadap kerajaan Malaysia dan pasukan SAR MH370 Malaysia.


baca lagi blogger yang mengutuk penipuan dan sikap tidak patriotik Wan Azizah di bawah..


Takut Wan Azizah 'Dibelasah' Lebih Teruk... TMI Tarik Balik Artikel #PrayForMH370


Portal berita, The Malaysian Insider (TMI) dilaporkan telah memadam artikel bertajuk “Dunia Guna Alat Canggih, Malaysia Pakai ‘Bomoh Doremi’ Cari MH370, kata Dr Wan Azizah” yang diterbitkan di portal tersebut sebelum ini.

Artikel tersebut menyelitkan kenyataan Presiden PKR itu yang memperlekehkan usaha kerajaan Malaysia dalam operasi mencari pesawat MH370, dalam ceramahnya di Sungai Jelok, Kajang malam tadi.

Pihak TMI tersebut cuba dihubungi oleh Selangor Press, namun panggilan tidak dijawab.

Ekoran tersiarnya artikel itu semalam, masyarakat terutamanya yang bersimpati atas tragedi pesawat MH370 mengutuk keras kenyataan dan tuduhan tidak berasas dibuat calon PKR untuk Pilihanraya Kecil (PRK) DUN kawasan itu.

Beberapa pemerhati politik melihat tindakan TMI tersebut bertitik tolak atas paksaan pihak tertentu agar artikel tersebut dipadam bagi mengelak Wan Azizah daripada terus dihentam masyarakat terutama menjelang PRK ini.

Semasa ceramah di Sungai Jelok itu, Wan Azizah telah menyelar kerajaan dan menuduh bahawa kerajaan Malaysia bergantung kepada khidmat bomoh untuk mencari pesawat MH370, selain turut menyelitkan beberapa kutukan terhadap pentadbiran kerajaan Barisan Nasional. [SUMBER]

baca juga...


TERKINI ! WAN AZIZAH MESTI JAWAB ISU #MH370 INI !! #PRKKAJANG 


Portal pro-pembangkang, The Malaysian Insider melaporkan kenyataan Wan Azizah. Di ataranya :
"Bagaimana Barisan Nasional (BN) menangani krisis pesawat hilang. China, kerana majoriti penumpang rakyat mereka, menggunakan satelit, Singapura menggunakan kapal selam. Malaysia pakai bomoh, naik tikar.seterusnya




MiM percaya ramai rakyat Malaysia yang marah dengan kenyataan Wan Azizah yang menuduh Malaysia 'pakai bomoh, naik tikar' dan membandingkannya dengan negara-negara lain yang membantu negara kita untuk menjejaki pesawat MH 370.

Pada hal, operasi mencari dan menyelamat (SAR) oleh pihak Malaysia melibatkan 15 pesawat TUDM, termasuk empat Hercules C130, sebuah CN 235, empat EC 725, dua helikopter Augusta serta enam kapal Tentera Laut Diraja Malaysia (TLDM) dan tiga kapal Agensi Penguatkuasaan Maritim Malaysia (APMM). baca sini

Kepada Wan Azizah, lihat foto-foto di bawah :



baca lagi di Blog Dr MIM



Sunday, August 28, 2011

Kebebasan Media: Singapura lebih teruk dari Zimbabwe

"Amnesty International criticises the government for penalising activists for exercising their right to free speech, while Reporters without Borders ranks Singapore 136th in terms of press freedom, below the likes of Iraq and Zimbabwe."


Singapore poll shows many still upset with long-ruling PAP
By Kevin Lim

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Former Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan's narrow win during Singapore's presidential election shows many voters are still unhappy with the long-ruling People's Action Party (PAP), but that they favour moderate rather than radical alternatives.
Supporters of the opposition Workers' Party of Singapore cheer as they wait for election results at a stadium in Singapore May 7, 2011. (REUTERS/Tim C/Files)

Tan's low share of Saturday's vote, unlikely to affect financial markets, was partly due to closest rival Tan Cheng Bock's ability to attract PAP supporters, who analysts say would not have endorsed candidates set on shaking up a regimented political system that has been key to Singapore's economic success.

Tony Tan, who was backed by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and many business groups, received 35.2 percent of the 2.15 million votes cast in the first-past-the-post contest, just marginally above medical doctor Tan Cheng Bock's 34.8 percent.

Investment adviser Tan Jee Say, who had been more vocal in his criticism of the PAP, got 25.04 percent while the fourth candidate, former insurance executive Tan Kin Lian, won 4.91 percent.

The PAP, which was co-founded by Lee's father, Lee Kuan Yew, has ruled strait-laced Singapore since independence in 1965.

Tony Tan's share of vote was well below the 60 percent obtained by the PAP in May parliamentary elections, when the opposition made historic gains amid unhappiness over soaring property prices and the rapid immigration into the rich Southeast Asian city-state.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Chua Hak Bin said the presidential election showed many Singaporeans were still unhappy with the PAP, which has boosted the supply of government housing and made it costlier for employers to hire foreigners since the May election.

"They are unhappy with the status quo and yet they are not willing to swing completely to a candidate they think will be too radical," he said.

Singapore's directly-elected president has historically performed mostly ceremonial duties. But the president wields veto powers that will let him delay the appointment of people to senior government positions as well as in government entities such as GIC and state investor Temasek.

Tan Cheng Bock, a former PAP parliamentarian with a track record of speaking up against unpopular policies, had said that if elected, he would use the president's powers to scrutinise government appointments more closely.

But he adopted a more conciliatory tone towards the government during the hustings than Tan Jee Say or Tan Kin Lian, and his election team included a mix of opposition figures as well as many rank-and-file PAP activists.

"PAP supporters are comfortable with both Dr Tony Tan and, to a lesser extent, Dr Tan Cheng Bock. The latter, for all his strong-willed independence, is not someone who is going to rock the boat," said Eugene Tan, a law lecturer at Singapore Management University.

Tan is the most common family name in Singapore, where ethnic Chinese make up about 75 percent of the population.

The PAP did not formally endorse Tony Tan although Lee had described him as a "unifying figure" who would bring honour and credit to Singapore.

In a message after the results, Lee said the margin of victory was narrow because both Tony Tan and Tan Cheng Bock "conveyed strong unifying messages, and declared their intention to work closely with the government".

Singapore, the Asian base for many banks and multinational companies, gets top rankings as an investment destination and for ease of doing business in international surveys.

But critics say that despite the facade of modernity, the city-state has few of the outlets for grievances normally found in a democratic society.

Amnesty International criticises the government for penalising activists for exercising their right to free speech, while Reporters without Borders ranks Singapore 136th in terms of press freedom, below the likes of Iraq and Zimbabwe.

Saturday's election, which went into a recount because of the closeness of the result, is the first contested race for president since 1993 largely due to the tough conditions set by the government for prospective candidates.

(Reporting by Kevin Lim; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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