CariDotMy

 Forgot password?
 Register

ADVERTISEMENT

Author: pendeta

[Tempatan] Najib bakal berdepan siasatan rasuah pihak berkuasa Amerika

[Copy link]
Post time 23-9-2015 10:41 AM | Show all posts
dizek replied at 23-9-2015 10:39 AM
tell that to chinese DAP supremo
lim kit siang incorporated

harap presiden umngok mampu
tarik balik projek mrt dari george kent
demi melayu
Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 23-9-2015 10:41 AM | Show all posts
witwit replied at 23-9-2015 10:40 AM
Kepada semua UMNO MELAYU yang membenci kaum Cina dan India....sedarlah bahawa Allah sbwt mencipta  ...

beginner chinese RBA
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 10:48 AM | Show all posts
lkick2113 replied at 22-9-2015 05:49 PM
Hahaha aku nak gelak pun ada dgn artikel ni.. Hari ni jibun ke UK rasmi apa ntah pasal PNB.. Harap2  ...

Aku sangka najib dah kecut telor nak pijak tanah kokesen mcm yg di laung laungkan kan . Tapi kenyataan nya lain plk
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 11:15 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
dizek replied at 23-9-2015 10:24 AM
politik rasuah korup ni parti
pagan kat ulu banat sarawak ko
nun pun ada

Mmg ada tpi aku xsokong. Meleis caprut pprt bangsat cam ko je sokong parti korup rasis. Btw,  najib laknat yg start mencarut guna bangang dan bangsat, so aku pon guna benda sama supaya macai boleh relate dgan mudah. Kahkahkah...
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 11:18 AM | Show all posts
dodolgemok replied at 23-9-2015 11:15 AM
Mmg ada tpi aku xsokong. Meleis caprut pprt bangsat cam ko je sokong parti korup rasis. Btw,  naji ...

korup kulu kilir

bukti tak ada
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 11:20 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
dizek replied at 23-9-2015 11:18 AM
korup kulu kilir

bukti tak ada

Dah tunjuk bukti pon nak kalih sana sini. Bila suruh siasat sentap terguris hati cam pondan lorong. Pastu salahkan cina dapig, lawak la kau woi kahkahkah...
Reply

Use magic Report

Follow Us
Post time 23-9-2015 11:23 AM | Show all posts
dodolgemok replied at 23-9-2015 11:20 AM
Dah tunjuk bukti pon nak kalih sana sini. Bila suruh siasat sentap terguris hati cam pondan lorong ...

setakat bukti internet
sakai sarawak macam ko boleh la
angguk
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 11:23 AM | Show all posts
dh tgkp baru cite la...
ni balik2...bakalll je semedanggg
Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 23-9-2015 12:10 PM | Show all posts
x lalu dah tgk......
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 12:57 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
I wonder how he can sleep at nite...skadal kewangan n kepimpinan merata2..yet, tak undur diri lgsong...xngaku silap... How can a coward is leading our country?
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 12:58 PM | Show all posts
siasatlah seadil adilnya
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 01:14 PM | Show all posts
lurve82 replied at 22-9-2015 02:24 AM
boring la..asyik bc berita gini jah..org tu still pegi sana sini...rilex2 jah...

org jahat mati lambat noks.
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:01 PM | Show all posts
akusukaq replied at 23-9-2015 10:48 AM
Aku sangka najib dah kecut telor nak pijak tanah kokesen mcm yg di laung laungkan kan . Tapi kenya ...

itu la omputih kata jump into conclusion ka apa ka tu

Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:11 PM | Show all posts
Dari "Nothing To Hide", sekarang jadi "Nowhere To Hide" pulak bagi Pak Jibby

You can run but you can't hide Jibby oooiii!!!
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:19 PM | Show all posts
When thousands of Malay Muslims marched through Kuala Lumpur last week to support his scandal-wracked government, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak kept his distance.

He neither attended nor officially endorsed the racially charged rally by members of Malaysia’s majority community.

But several members of Najib’s political party told Reuters they helped an ultranationalist Malay group stage the ‘Malay Pride’ rally. Critics accused the organisers of stoking racial tensions in multicultural Malaysia to distract from a multi-million-dollar corruption scandal swirling around the prime minister.

Protesters at the rally held signs reading ‘Don’t insult Malays and Islam’ and ‘#najibstays’. Some were eventually dispersed by riot police outside Chinatown, where many Chinese businesses are located.

There, witnesses said, they hurled racial abuse against ethnic Chinese and threatened a repeat of 1969, when ethnic rioting killed hundreds of people, mostly Chinese. Communal tension has simmered in the succeeding decades, and some fear that racially volatile mass gatherings like the Sept 16 rally could spiral into violence.

“It’s not a threat,” Ali Rustam, the head of the Malay group, said of the rally in an interview. “It’s a reminder: Don’t play with fire. Don’t insult the Malays too much.”

Malays make up about 60 percent of Malaysia's 30 million people and Chinese about 25 percent. There is also a sizeable Indian minority.

Many opposition supporters are ethnic Chinese, who dominated an anti-government protest last month that demanded Najib’s resignation.

‘Support your boss’

In a rural region of Selangor state last week, an official from the ruling United Malays National Organisation (Umno) told Reuters that his party division hired 25 buses to ferry about 1,000 supporters to the pro-Najib rally in Kuala Lumpur. Five Umno members said they were paid by party officials to attend.

“You have to support your prime minister, your boss,” said Ahmed Samsuri, an Umno division secretary in Selangor. Participants were fed and given a red T-shirt to wear, but weren’t paid, he said.

But five protesters, all Umno members in their teens or twenties, told Reuters that party officials had given them up to RM50 (US$12) when they boarded the buses. These small sums represent at least half a day’s wages in rural areas.

“We didn’t go because of the money. We went to unite the Malays,” said Shahrizan Ahmad, 18, a fisherman.

The prime minister’s office did not respond to a request for comment. Two senior Umno party officials also declined comment.

About 30,000 people attended the rally, which was held as Najib faces allegations of graft and mismanagement at indebted state fund 1MDB.

According to reports in July, investigators found that nearly US$700 million was put into a private bank account in Najib’s name.

Authorities in several countries are now scrutinising the fund. The New York Times has said a US federal grand jury was examining allegations of corruption involving Najib and people close to him.

Najib has denied taking any money for personal gain.

Martial arts group

The Sept 16 rally was officially organised by a Malay martial arts group called the National Silat Organisation, known by its Malay-language acronym Pesaka.

About half its members are also members of Umno, said the group’s chief Ali Rustam. He himself is a senior Umno functionary.

Authorities allowed the rally to go ahead although the opposition protest march last month was deemed illegal.

Ultranationalist groups like Pesaka have become more visible since the long-ruling party’s poor showing in a 2008 general election.

“To mobilise people they have to play on the same kind of rhetoric: that Malays are under threat and need defending,” said Sophie Lemière, an expert in Malay militancy at the European University Institute in Italy.

“Najib is in a very vulnerable moment. He needs these groups to create the impression that he’s strong.”

Business has returned to normal in Chinatown, but some traders there told Reuters they were still rattled by last week’s rally.

One said rumours of attacks against the community still circulated on social media.

The bulk of the protesters were mobilised by Pesaka, which says it is a civic organisation and claims hundreds of thousands of members nationwide.

While the prime minister didn’t attend the rally, he was guest of honour two days later at a mass gathering of Pesaka members in Kuala Lumpur’s Merdeka Square.

There, in traditional Malay dress, the British-educated Najib watched a martial arts display in which fighters appeared to dip their hands in boiling oil.

Afterwards, in a fiery speech, Najib praised Pesaka members as “willing to die” for the government.

“Malay people can also show that we are still able to rise when our dignity is challenged, when our leaders are insulted, criticised, shamed,” he said.

He added: “We respect other races. But don't forget: Malays also have their feelings. Malays also have their limits.”

- Reuters

Related reports
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:19 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
MeetJoeFly replied at 23-9-2015 12:57 PM
I wonder how he can sleep at nite...skadal kewangan n kepimpinan merata2..yet, tak undur diri lgsong ...

Dont worry u get a better one after this
To your liking
Since malaysian esp chinese not used to soft leader

Sooner than expected, Mr Zahid Hamidi

Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 23-9-2015 02:21 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
lkick2113 replied at 23-9-2015 02:01 PM
itu la omputih kata jump into conclusion ka apa ka tu

Jump the gun wakakaka
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:24 PM | Show all posts
Note: Thread has been banned by manager
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:24 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
nirman replied at 23-9-2015 02:19 PM
When thousands of Malay Muslims marched through Kuala Lumpur last week to support his scandal-wracke ...

For every 3 malays there is 1 chinese plus 1 indian/others
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 23-9-2015 02:37 PM | Show all posts
A trip by Malaysia’s embattled Prime Minister Najib Razak to London and New York is shrouded in mystery, with a London source saying the premier and his wife, Rosmah Mansor, are already in London, staying at the five-star Dorchester in Mayfair, and editors in Kuala Lumpur being told he won’t go until Sept. 23, after the weekly cabinet meeting. A source later confirmed that Najib had quietly left KL.

His overseas jaunt, which is expected to later include a trip to Milan with Rosmah for her Islamic dress fashion show, is scarred by spiraling investigations by international law enforcement agencies in New York, Switzerland, Singapore and London and domestic rumors of behind-the-scenes negotiations to replace him with a unity government — which seems unlikely now.

The multiple probes of the prime minister’s personal finances and the operations of the debt-strapped 1Malaysia Development Bhd., which faces more than US$11 billion of unmet liabilities that could trigger a national financial crisis, have delivered up disastrous international publicity in the US’s two most respected newspapers. The prime minister was hoping for a star turn at the United Nations General Assembly and a meeting with US President Barack Obama.

Hanging on

Conversations with multiple sources in Kuala Lumpur say the prime minister is determined to hang onto his job despite the international publicity. The pressure increased on Sept. 21, when Zeti Akhtar Aziz, the respected central bank governor, broke weeks of silence to say the public deserves answers on the controversy surrounding 1MDB and the huge donation to Najib’s own bank accounts. She said she had submitted her findings to the attorney general although others say the outcome is doubtful. Najib fired the former attorney general, Abdul Gani Patail, just about as he reportedly was to deliver indictments over the cases.

“We hear nothing here,” said the head of an economic think tank. “All the news is shut out of the local press.” That was echoed by several other sources who say that if the scandals have endangered his premiership, information hasn’t percolated to the surface.

There is the question of who would succeed him if he were to leave office. There appear few alternatives.

Who can lead?

“There is nobody else with what I characterize as the wherewithal of experience, knowledge, integrity and ability to lead,” said Dominic Puthucheary, one of the country’s most respected constitutional lawyers, in a telephone conversation. “Go into parliament and look at them, not one has that capacity. Our electoral system hasn’t produced the best in the country. We are unfortunately in a state where the institutions are dysfunctional. Not one institution really functions – not the judiciary, not the police, not the parliament, insofar as making sure the interests of the nation really function. That gap is a very big gap and that is a result of years of mediocrity having become the ethos everywhere. ”

Ahmad Zahid Hamadi, the man Najib picked to replace Muhyiddin Yassin, whom he fired abruptly, is considered too mercurial and too racist given the country’s delicate ethnic balance to take over. Muhyiddin, still the deputy president of the United Malays National Organization, is considered too close to Mahathir Mohamad, the former prime minister. Mahathir has riven the party with his attempts to drive Najib from office. Muhyiddin, who has become quite wealthy despite a lifetime of public service, is also viewed as ethically challenged.

Allies of Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, the Anglophilic 78-year-old one-time finance minister, have been seeking to put together a unity government. But many observers believe he has been too long out of the political mix and has become irrelevant. “There has been movement but I can’t speak about it over the phone,” said a source.

Immunity?

One of the big issues is whether to grant Najib immunity from future prosecution over the many questions that hang over his head concerning the enormous amounts of wealth he and Rosmah appear to have amassed, much of it in foreign countries, a good deal of it in jewelry, handbags and other decorations adorning Rosmah herself. Questions also have come up anew concerning the 2006 murder by two of his bodyguards of a young Mongolian woman with whom he was rumored to have had an affair. A recent Al Jazeera broadcast regenerated the questions. Mahathir is said to want to jail both of them.

Given the plethora of controversies, it is unsure if the prime minister is actually going to New York although his ace in the hole is Malaysia’s pivotal position on a number of issues including the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement, which US President Barack Obama wants to finalize before he leaves office. Other events in which Malaysia has an important part later this year are the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum summit in the Philippines and the annual ASEAN summit in Malaysia.

In any event, there is considerable confusion. Many observers point out that Najib ducked out as a speaker over embarrassment at the prestigious 16th International Anti-Corruption Conference and Transparency International gathering, held Sept. 2-4 in the country’s political capital of Putrajaya. They question if he wants to face the possibility of similar embarrassment in New York.  If Obama meets with him, despite the fact that he previously showered Najib with praise, it will only be because of US concerns over the TPP.

No one answered the general telephone line at the prime minister’s office to confirm his travel plans. Najib had been scheduled to leave on Sept. 21 and a source at the London embassy said Najib had scheduled a meeting with officials from the UK government for 9 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 22. However, a local news editor said he had received assurances that the premier’s luxurious Boeing jetliner would lift off after the weekly cabinet meeting on Sept. 23.

Najib reportedly postponed an earlier trip to London with Hishammuddin Hussein, his cousin and defense minister, to ogle military hardware for prospective purchases at the last minute. Hishamuddin went to the UK more than a week ago, with the prime minister remaining in Malaysia. Although there has been no official announcement in Kuala Lumpur about the current trip, the growing global clamor over corruption may have caused him to delay.

The clamor was renewed this week with a New York Times report on Sept. 21 that a federal grand jury is examining allegations of corruption over properties in the US that were purchased by shell companies belonging to the prime minister’s stepson, Riza Shahriz Abdul Aziz, as well s other real estate properties purchased by Jho Taek Low, a close family friend. Investigators are also said to be probing a US$681 million payment that floated through the US electronic banking system and into his personal bank account at AmBank in Kuala Lumpur in March of 2013.

Separate investigations are also reportedly being carried out as a result of information provided to law enforcement officials in Switzerland and London by Clare Rewcastle Brown, the editor of Sarawak Report, which on Sept. 22 reported that the US Justice Department’s Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Department and FBI members traveled to London earlier this year to collect evidence.

Other reports were published in the Wall Street Journal that at least US$3.78 billion in payments that 1MDB said it had paid to Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Co (IPIC) never got there.

These are serious investigations being carried out by competent and unreachable agencies. Unlike domestic offices, which the prime minister nullified, intimidated or co-opted, he has little chance of influencing other countries. That poses significant dangers that can’t be swatted away with charges that unnamed “forces,” usually referred to as Israeli, are trying to bring down a democratic Muslim government.
Reply

Use magic Report

You have to log in before you can reply Login | Register

Points Rules

 

ADVERTISEMENT


Forum Hot Topic
Kenapa Biri Biri Jalan Lambat?
XimKenapa Biri Biri Jalan Lambat?
Views : 21672 Replies : 64
Dharma Harun Adik Manja tanggung 2 ekor biawak komodo
PrickfordDharma Harun Adik Manja tanggung 2 ekor
Views : 5694 Replies : 75
Hanis Haizi Misqueen, Babutam, Nwantiti V79
syitaeyqaHanis Haizi Misqueen, Babutam, Nwantiti
Views : 205096 Replies : 4906
Semasa meeting boss tiba-tiba cakap "saya kecewa dengan prestasi kerja kamu". Apa yang korang nak jawab?
admin6Semasa meeting boss tiba-tiba cakap "say
Views : 4338 Replies : 8
Cinta itu buta:Gadis 23 tahun sanggup putuskan hubungan dengan ibu bapa demi berkahwin lelaki 80 tahun
YgBenarCinta itu buta:Gadis 23 tahun sanggup pu
Views : 3593 Replies : 23
Makan separuh kak
jueazMakan separuh kak
Views : 12349 Replies : 9
upsr bocor versi murid, cikgu, bapak
jonedoeupsr bocor versi murid, cikgu, bapak
Views : 5692 Replies : 24
Oh ni lah dia sebabnya....
RalineOh ni lah dia sebabnya....
Views : 3679 Replies : 28
Transfer aset trading?
KogoromouriTransfer aset trading?
Views : 5829 Replies : 11
Cara-cara nak tonton siaran TV dan Astro online secara percuma
khairulikhwanCara-cara nak tonton siaran TV dan Astro
Views : 30438 Replies : 30

 

ADVERTISEMENT


 


ADVERTISEMENT
Follow Us

ADVERTISEMENT


Mobile|Archiver|Mobile*default|About Us|CariDotMy

18-6-2024 03:54 PM GMT+8 , Processed in 0.096352 second(s), 43 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

Quick Reply To Top Return to the list