CARI Infonet

 Forgot password?
 Register

ADVERTISEMENT

12Next
Return to list New
View: 2999|Reply: 27

[Tempatan] Himpunan Merah : apa kata masyarakat antrabangsa

[Copy link]
Post time 17-9-2015 03:16 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Malays denounce Chinese in racially tinged Malaysia rally
  • 16 Sep 2015 at 16:41 1,118 viewed[url=]2 comments[/url]
  • WRITER: AFP
[url=][/url][url=][/url]

KUALA LUMPUR - Thousands of demonstrators marched through Malaysia's capital Wednesday to declare support for the embattled government and assert the political dominance of the Malay majority, in a demonstration whose racial overtones sparked concern.

Malay hardliners wave flags and shout slogans during a demonstration in Kuala Lumpur, on Sept 16, 2015.


The demonstration was organised by figures in the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) in response to massive street rallies last month that called for Prime Minister Najib Razak's resignation over a financial scandal.

Malay demonstrators paralysed normally bustling areas of Kuala Lumpur as they marched through chanting slogans targeting multi-ethnic Malaysia's Chinese minority.

"Our Malay way of life is under threat. We want to support Malays, Najib, and tell the Chinese to keep their place," said Faisal Nur, 23, a demonstrator from Malaysia's rural north.

The demonstration -- and a planned rally later in the day -- marks one of the largest public displays of what many Malaysian moderates warn is a trend toward racial and religious intolerance by hardline Malays.

UMNO has controlled Malaysia for 58 years, reserving economic and other advantages for Muslim Malays, saying they were needed to prevent their dominance by the sizeable ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities.

But disgust over alleged UMNO repression and electoral chicanery as well as frequent corruption scandals have contributed to a string of election setbacks.

In response, party hardliners have increasingly resorted to racial rhetoric portraying the commercially dominant Chinese as a threat to the Malay privileges.

Many Kuala Lumpur businesses run by Chinese -- who make up about a quarter of Malaysia's population -- were shuttered for the day out of fear of disturbances.

A heavy security presence including hundreds of police deployed throughout the capital diverted the march from predominantly Chinese areas, and no incidents were reported.

The vast majority of demonstrators were young ethnic Malay men wearing UMNO's red colours, many blowing loudly on plastic vuvuzelas.

Large numbers were bussed in by organisers from the countryside, where ruling-party support is strongest.

The rally has been criticised as racially provocative by leading figures in both UMNO and the opposition. Deadly sectarian riots in 1969 are still regularly cited as a underlining the need to maintain racial harmony.

Malaysia's leading polling firm, the Merdeka Center for Opinion Research, published a survey Tuesday which said only 24 percent of respondents supported the rally.

Najib, who was already under fire over huge sums of money missing from a state firm he launched, has been deeply tarnished by the revelation in July that Malaysian investigators had discovered nearly $700 million in deposits into his personal bank accounts.

His government has called them "political donations" from Middle Eastern sources but has refused to give details.

Najib subsequently sacked his attorney general and made other personnel moves that critics say have hampered criminal investigations into funds.

Organisers of the huge two-day demonstrations last month to demand Najib's ouster said more than 200,000 people attended.

Malay organisers said they hoped to attract 80,000 to Wednesday's rally.



Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 17-9-2015 05:05 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
nice coverage by AFP

sejak perhimpunan gelombang merah semalam,
barulah media luar tahu yang kuning BERSHITS
bukanlah mewakili majoriti rakyat malaysia
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 05:07 PM | Show all posts
dizek replied at 17-9-2015 05:05 PM
nice coverage by AFP

sejak perhimpunan gelombang merah semalam,

itu yg ndak disampaikan....


Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 05:11 PM | Show all posts
apa org cina pikir negara luar mampu tolong mereka di sini???

kena jurus maut melayu baru tahu....
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 05:14 PM | Show all posts
nice coverage?macai reti baca omputeh ke tak neh?....
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 05:15 PM | Show all posts
baru dunia tau betapa rasis dan jumudnya melayu UMNO ni
Reply

Use magic Report

Follow Us
Post time 17-9-2015 05:20 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
boo to the yellow chinese BERSHITS
by AFP

booooo

Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 08:33 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Sah macai x reti bi
Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 17-9-2015 11:00 PM | Show all posts
Br depa taw betapa hebat nye

Kuasa org melayu
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 11:05 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Sapa yg buat perhimpunan dulu? Bukan di asaskan oleh anwart ka sejak kt uni lagi.
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 17-9-2015 11:16 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
baca artikel pastu baca komen2 kat atas ni i duk gelak sensorang
setuju dengan posting @bit kat #8
senyum sinis je
Reply

Use magic Report

 Author| Post time 18-9-2015 11:30 AM | Show all posts
Malaysian official Jamal Mohamad Yunos defends use of anti-Chinese tauntsDateSeptember 18, 2015 - 12:54PM

[size=11.1872px]Lindsay Murdoch
South-East Asia correspondent for Fairfax Media


[size=1.2em]Bangkok:  An official of Malaysia's ruling party has defended the calling of ethnic Chinese "pigs" – a deeply insulting slur in the predominantly Muslim nation, where racial tensions are rising.
[size=1.2em]Jamal Mohamad Yunos said that for Muslim Malays the word pig is sensitive but "for the Chinese what is the problem? It is their food".
[size=1em]Pro-government 'red shirt' protestors shout slogans during a pro-government demonstration in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Wednesday. Photo: AP

[size=1.2em]Demonstrators shouted "Cina gila babi" which translates to "crazy Chinese pig" during a Malay supremacy and pro-government demonstration in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday. A journalist reported she was called a pig and told to "go back to China".
Advertisement

[size=1.2em]Critics have accused the United Malays National Organisation, the party that has governed the country for decades, of using the race card to divert attention from graft allegations swirling around prime minister Najib Razak, who is under intense pressure to resign.
[size=1.2em]Malaysia's population of 30 million consists of 67 percent Malays, most of whom are Muslims, 24 per cent Chinese and seven per cent Indians.
[size=1em]A pro-government 'red shirt' protester prays with a face mask emblazoned with the "Malay United" slogan at the pro-government demonstration in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday. Photo: AP

[size=1.2em]Race riots in 1969 led to an UMNO-led government implementing an affirmative action program that granted Malays economic and other privileges over ethnic Chinese, Indians and other minorities.
[size=1.2em]Opposition figure Anwar Ibrahim, who is now serving a jail sentence on what he says are trumped up sodomy charges, pledged to dismantle the system if he won elections in 2013.
[size=1.2em]Authorities in Kuala Lumpur, who have in the past been quick to arrest scores of government critics under draconian laws, have not moved against protesters who uttered racial slurs during Wednesday's demonstration that turned unruly, with police having to fire water cannon.
[size=1em]Riot police fire a water cannon at pro-government "red shirt" protesters as they try to enter Chinatown during a demonstration in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday. Photo: AP

[size=1.2em]Mr Jamal is an UMNO official and one of the key leaders of the protest.
[size=1.2em]Mr Najib said anyone who broke laws at the event should be prosecuted. But in his latest public comments the prime minister lashed out at critics demanding he explain how US$700 million ($975 million) mysteriously turned up in his personal banks accounts in 2013, or what happened to the money, saying blackmailers, forgers and foreigners are interfering in the country. "There is no lie they will not tell, no rumour they will not spread, so that they can say Malaysia is on a dangerous course," he told an UMNO gathering.
[size=1.2em]"But they are the danger. In their desperate wish to overthrown a democratically elected government they are willing to risk instability that has led to violent revolutions in many countries, some very close to us."
[size=1em]Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, right, at the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) supreme council meeting in Kuala Lumpur, earlier this month. Photo: AP

[size=1.2em]Instead of attacking the organisers of Wednesday's government-approved demonstration he condemned an outlawed but peaceful two-day anti-government protest on August 29 and 30 that attracted one of the biggest crowds in Malaysia's recent past.
[size=1.2em]"It is not right to organise rallies dominated by one race, which the expressed aim of toppling the government … as we have seen, this then leads to rallies by other races," he said.
[size=1.2em]As well as the unexplained money in his accounts, Mr Najib is under fire over state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad which is billions of dollars in debt. He oversees the fund.
[size=1.2em]Mr Najib has also denied new allegations raised over the murder in Kuala Lumpur in 2006 of then pregnant Mongolian translator Altantuya Shaariibuu, who was shot dead and had her body blown up with explosives.
[size=1.2em]Two of Mr Najib's body guards have been convicted over the murder and sentenced to death.
[size=1.2em]One of them, Sirul Azhar Umar, who is being held in Sydney's Villawood detention centre after fleeing to Australia, is alleged by the Al Jazeera news network to have asked for a bribe to keep quiet about the scandal.
[size=1.2em]"I won't bring down prime minister," he is alleged to have written in text messages. Mr Najib has strongly denied any wrongdoing in the case that has been the subject of intense comment in Malaysia's social media but has only received scant attention in the country's government controlled mainstream media.



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/malaysian-official-jamal-mohamad-yunos-defends-use-of-racist-taunts-20150918-gjpl3w.html#ixzz3m3cVaLdC
Follow us: [url=home.php?mod=space&uid=664792]@smh on Twitter[/url] | sydneymorningherald on Facebook


Reply

Use magic Report

 Author| Post time 18-9-2015 11:34 AM | Show all posts
Najib’s army of 'Red Shirt' pro-government supporters promise peaceful rally amid fears of racial backlash against ethnic Chinese


[size=0.786em]PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 15 September, 2015, 7:51pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 16 September, 2015, 8:24pm



[size=0.857em]Agence France-Pressein Kuala Lumpur






















[size=0.857em]Pro-government ethnic Malay hardliners wave flags and shout slogans during a demonstration in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: AFP





A planned demonstration by ethnic Malay hardliners in support of Malaysia’s government will be peaceful, organisers vowed Tuesday, despite fears it could incite racial tension in the multi-ethnic country.
The “Malay Dignity Uprising” in the capital Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday will bring out tens of thousands, said Jamal Yunos, a key organiser and a senior official in Malaysia’s long-time ruling party.
ADVERTISING












“We will not provoke anyone or spark a racial clash. We will not riot,” Jamal told reporters.
However, he said the rally would be a platform for participants to demand respect for the Muslim ethnic Malay majority and rail against a Chinese-based party in the opposition.
Comments by supporters of Wednesday’s event - which authorities have green-lighted - have been widely criticised as dangerous race-baiting.
Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak has been under pressure to resign. Photo: ReutersThe demonstration has been billed as a response to a massive two-day rally in Kuala Lumpur in late August by protesters demanding Prime Minister Najib Razak’s resignation over a financial scandal.

They also called for deep reform by the government, whose critics accuse it of using repression, corruption and electoral chicanery to stay in power.
Jamal said Wednesday’s event rally was backed by 250 Malay NGOs and would underline Malay support for Najib.
“We hope to see a sea of red in the capital. We encourage everyone to wear red,” Jamal said.
Red is the colour of the ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).  Anti-government protesters who took to streets last month wore yellow.
Tens of thousands of "Yellow Shirt" Malaysian protesters took to the streets of central Kuala Lumpur last month, demanding free and fair elections. Photo: EPAOrganisers had earlier announced plans to march through a busy tourist  district that includes many Chinese-owned shops, but have only received  approval to rally at a central park.
“My advice to the ’Red Shirts’ is not to provoke the other races. We want  to hold a peaceful protest. The Chinese in Kuala Lumpur need not shut their  shops out of fear,” Jamal said.
He lashed out, however, at Chinese elements in the opposition, saying their  actions threatened to “split” the nation.
UMNO has dominated government for decades, reserving economic and other advantages for Malays over the sizable ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities.
But the UMNO-controlled coalition has suffered in recent elections as disaffected Chinese voters flock to the multi-racial opposition, sparking rising anti-Chinese rhetoric by Malay hardliners.
Deadly sectarian riots in 1969 left a deep scar on the national psyche, and the government usually moves swiftly to curb racially provocative actions.
The pro-Malay demonstrators are expected to march through an area dominated by Chinese-owned businesses.
Police have vowed tight security to prevent any disturbances.









Reply

Use magic Report

 Author| Post time 18-9-2015 11:35 AM | Show all posts
KUALA LUMPUR - The organisers of Himpunan Rakyat Bersatu will pay the clean-up bill because they are "gentlemen", said Malay NGOs coalition president Datuk Jamal Yunus.

The National Silat Association or Pesaka has discussed with Kuala Lumpur City Council (DBKL) and agreed to pay the bill following Wednesday's rally.
"We are not like Bersih. We are 'gentlemen'. If there is a bill, we'll pay for it.
"So DBKL does not need to worry," said Jamal.
A clean-up bill estimated at RM50,000 (S$16,490) will be issued in a week.
Kuala Lumpur Mayor Datuk Amin Nordin Abdul Aziz said he was waiting for Alam Flora to submit the report.
Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Seri Rahman Dahlan, however, tweeted that the organisers could expect a bill of RM38,000.
"I just got confirmation from Alam Flora that the clean-up bill for Red Demo is RM38k. The bill will be sent to Red Demo organisers," he tweeted Thursday.
The rally at Padang Merbok, saw thousands of supporters streaming in from Masjid Negara, the Putra World Trade Centre and surrounding areas.
- See more at: http://news.asiaone.com/news/mal ... thash.UIeda6mt.dpuf
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 18-9-2015 11:49 AM | Show all posts
thread neh sendu sbb macai melayu lembu tak reti baca omputeh
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 18-9-2015 12:14 PM | Show all posts
alesandra replied at 18-9-2015 03:49 AM
thread neh sendu sbb macai melayu lembu tak reti baca omputeh

Kut macai perasan urban yg fail bhs english . Baca petikan berita ' ngo berhimpunan merah sedia bayar bill kutip sampah dgn dbkl . Tapi penganjur bershit 1-3 sampai ini hutang lapuk kutip sampah dbkl maseh mengelak nak bayar. So pihak mana lebeh bertanggung jawap dan gentleman ? Ada faham english kee
Reply

Use magic Report


ADVERTISEMENT


Post time 18-9-2015 12:15 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Makcik felda kena tipu
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 18-9-2015 12:16 PM | Show all posts
sedangkan nak cakap protect pun fail..apatah lagi nak baca karangan english berperenggan2.. mau berbuih mulut,juling mata macai baca..

Hidup Melayu!
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 18-9-2015 12:16 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
pendeta replied at 18-9-2015 11:34 AM
Najib’s army of 'Red Shirt' pro-government supporters promise peaceful rally amid fears of racial b ...

Najib jugak yg kekal gaya bugis lenggang pondan
Reply

Use magic Report

Post time 18-9-2015 03:52 PM | Show all posts
akusukaq replied at 18-9-2015 12:14 PM
Kut macai perasan urban yg fail bhs english . Baca petikan berita ' ngo berhimpunan merah sedia ba ...

babi apa ko cakap neh???english please
Reply

Use magic Report

12Next
Return to list New
You have to log in before you can reply Login | Register

Points Rules

 

ADVERTISEMENT



 

ADVERTISEMENT


 


ADVERTISEMENT
Follow Us

ADVERTISEMENT


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

11-5-2024 05:47 AM GMT+8 , Processed in 0.074404 second(s), 50 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

Quick Reply To Top Return to the list