Saturday, August 22, 2009

Even PAppies Need Not Be Afraid of Old Dog Thief

Not only the oppositions are not afraid of Old Dog Thief Lee Kuan Yew, today I think that even PAppies need not be afraid of this useless Corrupted and Incompetent Old Dog. He is NOTHING. Why are you afraid of Nothing?

Like a dog which dare only bark inside it's side of the fence, Lee Kuan Yew is precisely this kind of Coward. Once over at the other side of the fence, it got it's tail hidden between it's own two hind legs to cover his own ass, and he became humble and quiet. If you threaten it, it's hair will stand up.

We had seen how Old Dog Thief Lee Kuan Yew, got slammed and forced to appologize to Malaysia and Indonesia, time and again, not just once. Just Lan Lan and silent after he appologized. It takes only someone as lame and useless as Abdullah Ahmad Badai can simply demand appology from LKy. If you remember, during WB/IMF 2006 the Old Dog Thief (告洋状) complainted to WB/IMF westerners that Chinese In Malaysian & Indonesia Had Been Systematically Marginalized. Abdullah & Bang Bang Susilo merely asked LKy to explain what he complainted to Ang Moh, and then the Old Dog Thief just Lan Lan Appologized. He dare not appologize in person, and instead he ran to his western masters in Europe and then sent his appology from there in writting.

This is exactly like dogs running back to their masters when they found themselves in deeper trobubles than they could handle. They dare not even make a single sound and just ran back to master, only at the masters' feet they dare to make a single sound. This is Tyrant LKy for you PAppies (狗德行) why have you got to be afraid of him?

http://sammyboy.com/showpost.php?p=294732&postcount=7

I had asked PAppies to stand up against LKy the old dog thief, and if you do, I will ask Singaporean peasants to stand up to back you.

Be afraid no more, Renegade Now!

:-)



Sammyboy.Com Thread

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Malaysian Laws to Change, Rally Without Permit Allowed & ISA Slacked

Malaysiakini.Com Today's News URL

  • I'm not BN's ATM, says deep pocket MP
    Andrew Ong | Aug 19, 09 4:17pm
  • His mega bucks generosity towards his BN colleagues has earned him an expensive nickname. But when quizzed on it, Bintulu MP Tiong King Sing registers surprise and remarks: 'Don't say that...' [VIDEO INSIDE] MORE
  • MCA was 'upside down' after polls
    Tee Keat 'not disabled or single parent'

  • Q&A: PKFZ sizzled like 'koay teow'
    Andrew Ong | Aug 19, 09 5:09pm
  • Adding a culinary twist, the Sarawak politician says the trial by media was akin to char koay teow, a colloquial term for cooking up a small issue.MORE
  • Mystery letter emerges, inquest adjourned
    Wong Teck Chi | Aug 19, 09 4:34pm
  • NONEUPDATED 5.51PM The letter, the contents of which were not revealed, has been given to the police for investigations. Inquest to resume on Monday.MORE


It is obviously inevitable that such draconian systems such as ISA and Assembly / Procession bans will collapse. This is similar in Malaysia and Singapore as well as other Asian nations close by. The regimes are no longer able to sustain these classic shields to cover themselves, these systems became more burdens than shields to the regimes effectively. They had been hard-hit by these out-dated shields, they are painfully bruised. :-)

ISA in particular had hurt the famiLEE LEEgime in dramatic ways when JI's Mas Selamat fled ISD. :-) The Singaporean and Malaysian opposition fighters are no longer afraid of ISA. In Malaysia indeed the ISA detainee got elected while being detained, showing that the ISA had back-fired badly.

The famiLEE LEEgime which is still pressing 8 charges of Speech Without Permit against me & Dr. Chee Soon Juan, on top of other Assembly & Procession charges. But they are clearly at a point that they don't know where is their own direction, these are their serious set-backs and unlike before they found no leverage nor intemidation effects, except for an increasingly higher political price to pay. These charges only serve the function as Political Musturbation. :-)

BN Regime in Malaysia is in not any better situation than famiLEE LEEgime at the moment, Najib is forced to amend these old laws that had been used as shields by several PMs before himself. I can predict that the amendments on law will not ease the regimes plights by very much, they only proved their defeats, similar with famiLEE LEEgime's bunch legislation changes.

While they made efforts to try to look less rediculos the reflections shows strongly otherwise.


Sammyboy.Com Thread

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Wong Kan Seng's cheap atttempt to buy over Malaysian ISD Chief to get Mas Selamat


What a cheapo move Ah Seng?!

Try to get MSK back from Najib by bribing Ramli Sha’ari with a cheap medal? Najib must had died laughing. :-)

Poor Ah Seng desperately wants to get Mas Selamat Kestari back before election. His Toa Payoh GRC is very insecure otherwise, thanks to his own Gurkhas & Internal Security Department. :-)

Poor Ah Seng....


Yahoo Singapore News URL



Malaysian police’s special branch director conferred prestigious medal

Channel NewsAsia - Wednesday, August 12

SINGAPORE: The Singapore president has conferred the Meritorious Service Medal to the Royal Malaysian Police’s special branch director, Ramli Sha’ari.

Singapore’s Home Affairs Minister, Wong Kan Seng, presented the award to Mr Ramli on Tuesday.

The award is a recognition of Mr Ramli’s outstanding role and commitment in developing the ties between the Malaysian Special Branch (MSB) and the Internal Security Department (ISD) of Singapore.

Under his leadership, the relationship between both sides has grown even closer, with substantive exchanges of counter—terrorism intelligence and joint operations against the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) and other terrorism—related targets.

The close collaboration has resulted in the capture of a number of Singaporean JI fugitives in Malaysia. And among them is the Singapore JI leader Mas Selamat Kastari, who was recaptured in Johor in April following his escape from Singapore last year.

A statement from the Home Affairs Ministry said that MSB’s counter—terrorism efforts and successes have helped to make Singapore and the region safer.

— CNA/yt




Sammyboy.com Thread

Friday, August 07, 2009

Singaporeans should Counter-Rally against famiLEE LEEgime each NDP

This is the tradition since Ass Loong Son's Mai Hum Saga. I am insisting here that it should become a persistent tradition until the LEEgime's end.

I am calling Singaporeans to record each & every of famiLEE LEEgime's National Day Rally and put on e.g. YouTube, and for the purpose of posting Video Responds or COUNTER RALLY MESSAGES against it, soon after each National Day.

I call on activists and volunteers to assist each opposition parties to record; edit produce and publish these videos. :-)

There is an on going idea also for a series of Political Talk Show Online. I am calling for a concerted effort to get this materialized. There should be a series of Online Talk Shows on selected topics, recorded and published on the New Media, either forthnightly or monthly basis, runing from now till the next GE. Invite the opposition canidate, and invite the PAp - but I know that they will chicken out. :-)

Make the National Day the 1st topic, make H1N1 the next. We can do NKF; MSK; IR etc later. Don't forget also LEEs defamation suit. ;)

Need sponsorship of sound and lightings and venue, and furniture. Need volunteer video crew; editor; recording persons for audio & video; need show host and helpers etc. Public audience to be allowed to speak or raise questions. The recording should be quasi-live, and then web-casted within days of the recording.

Lets get this going!

:-)




Sammyboy.Com URL

Sunday, August 02, 2009

Malayasia: Anti-ISA vs Pro-ISA protests - Equal Treatment?

My Big Question is Weather There Were EQUAL TREATMENT Or NOT?

There were 2 protests on the same subject of Internal Security Act at the same time & within capital city of Malaysia. But were they both Treated EQUALLY by the Law and Enforcers?

Why all of the nearly 600 protesters arrested are from the Anti-ISA Protest? What about the Pro-ISA protest? Both the protests had been ban and outlawed, but not handled equally at the enforcement.

Malaysiakini.Com Chinese News URL:



西华拉沙延扣两日料控演讲煽动
警方被轰未依儿童法令对待少年
8月2日 上午 11点31分
吉隆坡总警长莫哈末沙都今日傍晚证实,警方在昨日镇压反对内安法令大集会中逮捕了589人;其中530人在录取口供后已经获得释放。

不过,其余59人包括公正党副主席西华拉沙,则遭到警方扣留过夜。


推事前往警局审理延扣申请


推事是在今午前往武吉加里尔警察局,审理警方要求延长扣留这些人士的申请。

共有大约70名家属及支持者聚集在武吉加里尔警察局,等待他们获释。

警方是根据社团法令第43条文、警方法令第27(5)条文、43条文及27(5)条文调查。




明早将会控上大使路法庭

推事批准警方延续扣留西华拉沙多两日,从今午4点半算起,并预料将会在明早10点被提控上大使路法庭大厦。

他的律师普拉维伦透露,预料西华拉沙将会被提控意图煽动,因为他被指在靠近拉惹路的森那美集团建筑物附近的废除内安法令集会中发表演讲。

不过其律师声称,西华拉沙其实不曾身处那里。

普拉维伦指出,他明日将会针对延扣申请司法审查,因为警方根本没有理由延扣西华拉沙。

他也透露,大部分的男性扣留者同样面对延扣两日的命运,并将会在明日与西华拉沙一起被提控上庭。无论如何,确实遭延扣的人数并不明朗。

今晚8点办烛光晚会声援

另一方面,废除内安法令联盟在今晚8点将会举行一场烛光会以声援被延扣的人士。

警局锁门不让探望被扣者


另一方面,在今日早上,由于武吉加里警察局大门深锁,导致律师及家属必须透过铁栅与警方争执,要求探访被扣留者。

尽管家属声称要求进入警局报案,但是依然被拒绝进入。

警方也派出一队轻型镇暴队在警局内驻守。家属们则在大门外频频高呼“我们要求公正”。(左图)

律师表示,其中一些人士已被扣留超过24小时,因此属于非法扣留。

年迈老妇现场嚎啕大哭


现场更有一名70岁年迈老妇人嚎啕大哭,要求会见其被扣留的丈夫。结果,警方最终在不忍心之下,允许她在律师陪同下进入警察局。

不过,警方最终允许所有律师进入警局。

获释时身穿扣留所制服

在今日下午2点半左右,昨日被捕的3名未成年少年的命运各异。其中一人被延长扣留4天,另外两人已获释。

阿玛(Ammar Bad Latiff Mansor,13岁)和苏海益(Suhaib Mat Sah,16岁),在今午从八打灵再也警局被带往武吉加里尔警局后,当场获释。

不过,两人获释时仍然身穿扣留所制服。

另外一名少年费祖丁(Faizuddin Hamzah,16岁)则被延长扣留4天。律师表示,这名少年目前仍被扣留在八打灵再也警局。

母子同时被扣却分开扣留


较早前,根据国内人权组织——大马人民之声披露,这3名少年在昨日下午1点,即集会开始前已经被逮捕。

被捕的16岁少年苏海益,是已遭内安法令扣留长达7年的末沙(Mat Sah Satray)的儿子。

苏海益的母亲诺莱拉(Norlaila Othman,左图)是废除内安法令联盟的成员,也同样在昨日的集会中被捕。

尽管两母子是同时被捕,但是却被分开扣留,诺莱拉目前被扣留在武吉加里尔扣留所。

人民之声表示,另外一名16岁的少年,昨日已经在没有代表律师的情况下,被警方带上庭成功延长扣留长达4天。


少年自被捕后未获得食物

这个人权组织也披露,当该组织及律师援助中心的代表於昨晚11点半抵达八打灵再也警察局时,被扣留的少年自下午被扣后仍未获得进食。反而,他们在律师的探望下,才获得律师提供食物。

这些少年也被要求更换扣留所制服,其中一人与成年人一起被扣留,这已经是违反了儿童法令所阐明的儿童权利及处理儿童扣留者的做法。

人民之声也表示,这些少年从昨晚在今日早上都没有获得任何食物,甚至当他们被带往武吉加里尔警局,以便申请延长扣留时,也被戴上手铐。





Sammyboy.Com Thread

Saturday, August 01, 2009

Farewell to Mrs Corazon Aquino

Farewell to Auntie Cory.

She finally reunited with her husband who was assassinated by the Bastard Totalitarian Regime of F Marcos in 1983.

Rest In Peace Mrs Aquino. You will be remembered.

Yahoo's News URL




Corazon Aquino, Philippines president, dead at 76

File photo of former Philippine President Corazon Aquino reading a statement during a news conference in Manila Reuters – Former Philippine President Corazon Aquino reads a statement during a news conference in Manila in this …

MANILA, Philippines – Former President Corazon Aquino, who swept away a dictator with a "people power" revolt and then sustained democracy by fighting off seven coup attempts in six years, died on Saturday, her son said. She was 76.

The uprising she led in 1986 ended the repressive 20-year regime of Ferdinand Marcos and inspired nonviolent protests across the globe, including those that ended Communist rule in eastern Europe.

But she struggled in office to meet high public expectations. Her land redistribution program fell short of ending economic domination by the landed elite, including her own family. Her leadership, especially in social and economic reform, was often indecisive, leaving many of her closest allies disillusioned by the end of her term.

Still, the bespectacled, smiling woman in her trademark yellow dress remained beloved in the Philippines, where she was affectionately referred to as "Tita (Auntie) Cory."

"She was headstrong and single-minded in one goal, and that was to remove all vestiges of an entrenched dictatorship," Raul C. Pangalangan, former dean of the Law School at the University of the Philippines, said earlier this month. "We all owe her in a big way."

Her son, Sen. Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino III, said she died at 3:18 a.m. Saturday (1918 GMT Friday).

Aquino was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer last year and confined to a Manila hospital for more than a month. Her son said the cancer had spread to other organs and she was too weak to continue her chemotherapy.

For the past month, supporters have been holding daily prayers for Aquino in churches in Manila and throughout the country. Requiem Masses were scheduled for later Saturday, and yellow ribbons were tied on trees around her neighborhood in Quezon city.

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, who is on an official visit to the United States, remembered Aquino as a "national treasure" who helped lead "a revolution to restore democracy and the rule of law to our nation at a time of great peril.

"She picked up the standard from the fallen warrior Ninoy and helped lead our nation to a brighter day," Arroyo said, referring to Aquino' husband, opposition leader Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr., who was assassinated in 1983.

She said the Philippines will observe 10 days of national mourning. The Armed Forces of the Philippines said it would accord full military honors during Aquino's wake, including gun salutes and lowering flags to half-staff.

TV stations on Saturday ran footage of Aquino's years in power together with prayers while her former aides and supporters offered condolences.

"Today our country has lost a mother," said former President Joseph Estrada, calling Aquino "a woman of both strength and graciousness."

Even the exiled Communist Party founder Jose Maria Sison, whom Aquino freed from jail in 1986, paid tribute from the Netherlands.

Aquino's unlikely rise began in 1983 after her husband was gunned down on the tarmac of Manila's international airport as he returned from exile in the United States to challenge Marcos, his longtime adversary.

The killing enraged many Filipinos and unleashed a broad-based opposition movement that thrust Aquino into the role of national leader.

"I don't know anything about the presidency," she declared in 1985, a year before she agreed to run against Marcos, uniting the fractious opposition, the business community, and later the armed forces to drive the dictator out.

Maria Corazon Cojuangco was born on Jan. 25, 1933, into a wealthy, politically powerful family in Paniqui, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) north of Manila.

She attended private school in Manila and earned a degree in French from the College of Mount St. Vincent in New York. In 1954 she married Ninoy Aquino, the fiercely ambitious scion of another political family. He rose from provincial governor to senator and finally opposition leader.

Marcos, elected president in 1965, declared martial law in 1972 to avoid term limits. He abolished the Congress and jailed Aquino's husband and thousands of opponents, journalists and activists without charges. Aquino became her husband's political stand-in, confidant, message carrier and spokeswoman.

A military tribunal sentenced her husband to death for alleged links to communist rebels but, under pressure from U.S. President Jimmy Carter, Marcos allowed him to leave in May 1980 for heart surgery in the U.S.

It was the start of a three-year exile. With her husband at Harvard University holding court with fellow exiles, academics, journalists and visitors from Manila, Aquino was the quiet homemaker, raising their five children and serving tea. Away from the hurly-burly of Philippine politics, she described the period as the best of their marriage.

The halcyon days ended when her husband decided to return to regroup the opposition. While she and the children remained in Boston, he flew to Manila, where he was shot as he descended the stairs from the plane.

The government blamed a suspected communist rebel, but subsequent investigations pointed to a soldier who was escorting him from the plane on Aug. 21, 1983.

Aquino heard of the assassination in a phone call from a Japanese journalist. She recalled gathering the children and, as a deeply religious woman, praying for strength.

"During Ninoy's incarceration and before my presidency, I used to ask why it had always to be us to make the sacrifice," she said in a 2007 interview with The Philippine Star newspaper. "And then, when Ninoy died, I would say, 'Why does it have to be me now?' It seemed like we were always the sacrificial lamb."

She returned to the Philippines three days later. One week after that, she led the largest funeral procession Manila had seen. Crowd estimates ranged as high as 2 million.

With public opposition mounting against Marcos, he stunned the nation in November 1985 by calling a snap election in a bid to shore up his mandate. The opposition, including then Manila Archbishop Cardinal Jaime L. Sin, urged Aquino to run.

After a fierce campaign, the vote was held on Feb. 7, 1986. The National Assembly declared Marcos the winner, but journalists, foreign observers and church leaders alleged massive fraud.

With the result in dispute, a group of military officers mutinied against Marcos on Feb. 22 and holed up with a small force in a military camp in Manila.

Over the following three days, hundreds of thousands of Filipinos responded to a call by the Roman Catholic Church to jam the broad highway in front of the camp to prevent an attack by Marcos forces.

On the third day, against the advice of her security detail, Aquino appeared at the rally alongside the mutineers, led by Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos, the military vice chief of staff and Marcos' cousin.

From a makeshift platform, she declared: "For the first time in the history of the world, a civilian population has been called to defend the military."

The military chiefs pledged their loyalty to Aquino and charged that Marcos had won the election by fraud.

U.S. President Ronald Reagan, a longtime supporter of Marcos, called on him to resign. "Attempts to prolong the life of the present regime by violence are futile," the White House said. American officials offered to fly Marcos out of the Philippines.

On Feb. 25, Marcos and his family went to the U.S.-run Clark Air Base outside Manila and flew to Hawaii, where he died three years later.

The same day, Aquino was sworn in as the Philippines' first female leader.

Over time, the euphoria fizzled as the public became impatient and Aquino more defensive as she struggled to navigate treacherous political waters and build alliances to push her agenda.

"People used to compare me to the ideal president, but he doesn't exist and never existed. He has never lived," she said in the 2007 Philippine Star interview.

The right attacked her for making overtures to communist rebels and the left, for protecting the interests of wealthy landowners.

Aquino signed an agrarian reform bill that virtually exempted large plantations like her family's sugar plantation from being distributed to landless farmers.

When farmers protested outside the Malacanang Presidential Palace on Jan. 22, 1987, troops opened fire, killing 13 and wounding 100.

The bloodshed scuttled talks with communist rebels, who had galvanized opposition to Marcos but weren't satisfied with Aquino either.

As recently as 2004, at least seven workers were killed in clashes with police and soldiers at the family's plantation, Hacienda Luisita, over its refusal to distribute its land.

Aquino also attempted to negotiate with Muslim separatists in the southern Philippines, but made little progress.

Behind the public image of the frail, vulnerable widow, Aquino was an iron-willed woman who dismissed criticism as the carping of jealous rivals. She knew she had to act tough to earn respect in the Philippines' macho culture.

"When I am just with a few close friends, I tell them, 'OK, you don't like me? Look at the alternatives,' and that shuts them up," she told America's NBC television in a 1987 interview.

Her term was punctuated by repeated coup attempts — most staged by the same clique of officers who had risen up against Marcos and felt they had been denied their fair share of power. The most serious attempt came in December 1989 when only a flyover by U.S. jets prevented mutinous troops from toppling her.

Leery of damaging relations with the United States, Aquino tried in vain to block a historic Senate vote to force the U.S. out of its two major bases in the Philippines.

In the end, the U.S. Air Force pulled out of Clark Air Base in 1991 after the eruption of Mount Pinatubo forced its evacuation and left it heavily damaged. The last American vessel left Subic Bay Naval Base in November 1992.

After stepping down in 1992, Aquino remained active in social and political causes.

Until diagnosed with colon cancer in March 2008, she joined rallies calling for the resignation of President Arroyo over allegations of vote-rigging and corruption.

She kept her distance from another famous widow, flamboyant former first lady Imelda Marcos, who was allowed to return to the Philippines in 1991.

Marcos has called Aquino a usurper and dictator, though she later led prayers for Aquino in July 2009 when the latter was hospitalized. The two never made peace.

___

Associated Press writers Jim Gomez and Oliver Teves contributed to this report.