Showing posts with label ambiga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ambiga. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Kuda Anwar.


SEREMBAN 21 April - Sebuah pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) hari ini membantah penganjuran satu forum yang dihadiri pengerusi pertubuhan tidak berdaftar, Gabungan Pilihan Raya Bersih dan Adil (Bersih), Datuk S. Ambiga di sebuah gereja di sini.
Ambiga
Forum mengenai Pilihan Raya Umum Ke-13 yang dibuat dalam sebuah dewan di kawasan gereja itu disifatkan NGO berkenaan sebagai menyalahgunakan rumah ibadat untuk tujuan politik.

Pengerusi Kelab Perhubungan Rakyat 1Malaysia, R. Rajandaran berkata, pihaknya tidak mahu agama dan politik dicampuradukkan melalui program demikian.

"Jika satu pihak mengunakan rumah ibadat untuk tujuan politik, pihak lain akan menggunakan kaedah sama. Apabila ini berlaku, lama kelamaan kecelaruan berlaku dan tidak baik untuk sebuah negara berbilang kaum dan agama," katanya di sini.

Rajandaran bercakap kepada pemberita bersama beberapa ahli kelab itu selepas membuat bantahan secara aman di luar gereja berkenaan.

Sehubungan itu Rajandaran memberitahu, pihaknya telah membuat laporan di Balai Polis Jalan Campbell dekat sini bagi membantah penganjuran forum berkenaan di gereja itu.
Katanya lagi, semua pihak perlu menghormati kemuliaan rumah ibadat dan tidak mempergunakannya untuk sebarang tujuan berkaitan politik.

irene fernandez
Dalam pada itu, Ambiga tiba di dewan gereja itu kira-kira pukul 11 pagi ini untuk menyampaikan ucapan, bagaimanapun seorang pegawai penguatkuasa kempen pilihan raya Suruhanjaya Pilihan Raya (SPR) kawasan Parlimen Rasah terlebih dahulu bertemunya.
Pegawai berkenaan mengingatkan Ambiga supaya tidak melanggar Akta Kesalahan Pilihan Raya 1954 yang melarang kempen politik di rumah ibadat.

Dr Ahmad Farouk Musa
Bagaimanapun, forum itu berjalan lancar tanpa sebarang kekecohan dengan Ambiga mengulangi perkara yang biasa disampaikan sebelum ini termasuk menyatakan negara memerlukan kerajaan dan pembangkang yang kuat selain mahu pengundi menggunakan kuasa mereka untuk menentukannya.

Antara yang hadir termasuk Pengarah Tenaganita, Irene Fernandez dan Pengarah Islamic Renaissance Front (IRF), Dr. Ahmad Farouk Musa.


Artikel Penuh: http://www.utusan.com.my/utusan/Pilihan_Raya/20130422/px_20/NGO-bantah-Ambiga-ceramah-di-gereja#ixzz2RAVz1g4B 

© Utusan Melayu (M) Bhd 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Mat Sabu terkulai dikaki Ambiga

Protes Bersih 3.0 secara camouflage diketuai oleh Ambiga dan Pak Samad.  Demonstrasi yang sebenar ialah pemimpin parti pembangkang mahu mengancam kerajaan sekarang. Sayang seribu kali sayang orang Melayu sudahnya bergasak dengan orang Melayu. Mungkin Mat Sabu lupa siapa Ambiga, atau Mat Sabu sudah buta mata kanan, hanya guna mata kiri sahaja. 


Mat Sabu patut ambil tahu apa rakan sekulit kita lakukan di Bekasi Indonesia. Lepas ini Mat Sabu kena beringat-ingat masa berpaut tengkuk dengan Ambiga.



Hard-Line Muslims Test Indonesia's Tolerance


by Anthony Kuhn | May 24, 2012 
 In the city of Bekasi, Indonesia, outside Jakarta, a handful of Christians head to Sunday worship. But before they can reach their destination, they are stopped and surrounded by a large crowd of local Muslims who jeer at them and demand that they leave.
This is the Filadelfia congregation, a Lutheran group. They are ethnic Bataks from the neighboring island of Sumatra who have migrated to Bekasi, and they have been blocked from holding services on several occasions. Recently, a journalist who demonstrated in support of the congregation was beaten by an angry mob.
Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim majority nation and has drawn praise for its evolution into a vibrant democracy. It's a country of more than 17,000 islands, with more than 300 ethnic groups who speak about 740 languages. But recent cases of persecution of religious minorities have led some to question whether Indonesia is still living up to its reputation for pluralism and tolerance.
The persecuted include atheists as well as minority Muslim sects, such as the Shia and Ahmadiyya. Hundreds of churches have been closed in recent years, including, most recently, 17 house churches this month in Aceh, the only province in Indonesia where Shariah, or Islamic law, is in effect.
Riot Police Intervene
Back in Bekasi, the standoff is getting tense. Truckloads of riot police arrived on the scene beforehand, but do nothing to separate the Christians and Muslims. Congregation leader Rev. Palti Panjaitan negotiates with security forces to let them pass.
"If my brothers here are the killing type, then I am ready to be killed," he says quietly. "That's it! Tell the police I am ready to be killed right here. If it's a riot you're worried about, then arrest the rioters, not me."
The congregation is headed to pray in an empty lot where they have been barred from building a church. Outside the lot, signs say Muslims are ready to wage jihad, or holy war, against the Christian group. Muslim resident Irwan Taufik, blames the Christians for the confrontation. He says rejecting infidels is a legitimate form of jihad.
"Indonesia is famous for its harmony," he says, wearing an embroidered shirt and a black felt cap. "But the Christians should have gathered the community leaders and clerics together and asked us, 'Can we worship and build a church here?' But if in fact the people are not willing and reject the request, then why must they insist?"
The police warn the Christians that they can no longer guarantee their safety, and the Christians relent, turning their motorcycles around and heading home.
An Intolerant Minority
Panjaitan complains that even though his congregation has fulfilled all the requirements, the local government in Bekasi will not grant it permission to build a church.
He says they won't even obey a Supreme Court ruling affirming their right to build it. He adds that Muslims and Christians usually get along fine here, but hard-line Islamist groups have been stirring up confrontation.
"The majority of the Muslims here are tolerant, but they are easily influenced by the intolerant," he says. "Actually, tolerant people in Indonesia are in the majority, but they are passive. I wish they would be more active and say 'no' to the intolerance which is now increasing in Bekasi."
Panjaitan particularly blames the militant Islamic Defenders Front, which, according to police records, has been involved in 34 cases of violence and destruction in the past two years.
Last week, the front persuaded authorities to deny a permit for Lady Gaga to perform in Jakarta. The week before, it disrupted a speech by liberal Canadian Muslim author Irshad Manji. Manji was assaulted and a member of her staff was injured. Manji says this has changed her view of Indonesia since her last trip here in 2008.
"Four years ago, I held a book launch here that attracted both ultraconservative Muslims and Muslim transsexuals, and each of them had their say," she recalls. "And four years later, the center of Islamic pluralism has become just another cesspool of intimidation."
Elaine Pearson, deputy director of the Asia Division at the New York-based Human Rights Watch, says Indonesia's backsliding on religious tolerance reflects a weak rule of law, which results in impunity for those who persecute religious minorities. This, in turn, creates a climate of fear among ordinary Indonesians.
"Even senior government officials have shown quite openly that they protect groups like the Islamic Defenders Front," Pearson says. "They're very powerful, they're very influential, and people don't really want to be seen as working against them."
Raising Old Worries 
Since the birth of the Indonesian nation in 1945, there have always been doubts about whether such a disparate collection of peoples and cultures could actually hold together.
The problem of intolerance raises this question once again. Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has appealed to the public for tolerance, but he has declined to intervene on behalf of minorities.
Barred from holding their Sunday service in Bekasi, the Filadelfia congregation troops into downtown Jakarta. They set up a generator, speakers and an electric keyboard. Then they pray, sing and protest, right across the street from the presidential palace.
Source: NPR

Friday, May 25, 2012

Groups protest in front of Ambiga's house


KUALA LUMPUR: Two groups converged outside Bersih co-chairman Datuk S. Ambiga's house in Bukit Damansara Thursday to voice their protest against the April 28 rally.
Although the Kuala Lumpur Petty Traders Action Council's "pasar malam protest" was called off, another group of 50 youths, wearing white t-shirts with the word Halau 1.0, marched by, shouting slogans.
They were watched by more than a hundred police and City Hall enforcement officers, who were on standby at Ambiga's residence since afternoon. Vehicles were not stopped from passing the area.

Malaysian Petty Traders Association president Datuk Jamal Yunus during a press conference after handing over a memorandum for Ambiga

Council chairman Datuk Jamal Md Yunus, who was supposed to lead some 60 traders in setting up the stalls at 4pm, said they decided to call it off as they did not want to go against City Hall and the police.
Jamal, who handed over a memorandum to Ambiga, said the council now planned to gather 150,000 people at the Bukit Jalil stadium on June 23 to express its rejection of the Bersih rallies as well as to promote peace.
"We still want Ambiga to be held responsible for our losses and we don't want Bersih to organise anymore rallies," he said.
He also distanced himself from the earlier group, saying that "they were not part of us."
That group - calling itself Gerakan Belia Gagasan 1Malaysia - had marched towards Ambiga's house, shouting "Bersih kotor! (Bersih is dirty) and Halau Ambiga! (Chase away Ambiga)."
They too handed over a memorandum to Ambiga and demanded that she apologised to all Malaysians for the damage due to Bersih rallies.

By JOSEPH KAOS Jr and LOSHANA K. SHAGAR

The Star


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

'Bersih 4' in front of Ambiga's house


Kuala Lumpur: Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) will not allow the group calling itself "Bersih 4.0" to open a night market in front of electoral reform group Bersih 3.0 co-Chairman Datuk S. Ambiga's house in Bukit Damansara, said Kuala Lumpur Mayor Tan Sri Ahmad Fuad Ismail.
He said the Street, Drainage and Building Act 1974 does not allow people to intrude into other people's territory, and therefore the group should not proceed with its plan.
"They (Bersih 4.0 organisers) must ask for our permission, but we will not allow.
People make mistakes and we know they (Bersih 3.0) made mistakes...we should not follow.
If everybody follows (the mistakes) and ignore the law, what will happen to our country?" he told reporters after opening the Impiana KLCC Hotel new wing, here, Monday.
Sunday, 60 petty traders told a news conference that they planned to open up stalls in front Ambiga's house in Bukit Damansara here on Thursday and Friday, with the hope of recouping the losses they suffered during the Bersih 3.0 rally in the city on April 28.
Kuala Lumpur Petty Traders Action Council Chairman, Datuk Jamal Md Yunus, said they would be applying for the needed permits from the authorities to do business there but would still go ahead if denied. - Bernama