Sunday, July 19, 2009

PERSEMBAHAN BUDAYA MERIAHKAN MAJLIS MAKAN MALAM USBO

KOTA KINABALU: Persembahan pelbagai warisan budaya masyarakat rumpun Bajau memeriahkan majlis Makan Malam Amal Persatuan Bajau Bersatu Sabah (USBO) yang diadakan di sebuah hotel di ibu negeri malam tadi. Persembahan selama sejam itu menampilkan persembahan tarian, alat muzik dan nyanyian lagu-lagu pelbagai etnik dalam rumpun Bajau, antaranya Iranun, Ubian dan Suluk. Gabungan pelbagai warisan budaya dalam satu persembahan itu menjadi manifestasi ke arah menjayakan konsep 1Malaysia.

Speaker Dewan Rakyat, Tan Sri Pandikar Amin Mulia menjadi tetamu kehormat majlis berkenaan yang dihadiri lebih 400 orang. Menyambut ketibaan para tetamu dan jemputan termasuk Presiden Usbo, Datuk Seri Salleh Said.

Dalam ucapannya, Salleh berkata matlamat utama penganjuran majlis ini adalah untuk mengisi dana Usbo dan untuk digunakan bagi melaksanana pelbagai kegiatan dan aktiviti yang telah dirancangkan. "Menerusi acara sebegini, ia bukan saja mengeratkan persefahaman dan memperkukuhkan jalinan silaturahim antara satu sama lain, tetapi juga menjadi pentas terbaik mengetengahkan warisan senibudaya rumpun masyarakat kita.
"Dengan demikian, ia secara langsung mendukung gagasan pimpinan kerajaan mewujudkan sebuah bangsa yang bersatu padu, dinamik dan progresif, sekali gus merealisasikan slogan 1Malaysia," katanya.

Sehubungan itu, Salleh berkata pihaknya bercadang membawa program berkenaan ke Kuala Lumpur pada masa akan datang, bagi mengangkat warisan budaya rumpun masyarakat Bajau ke pentas nasional.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Govt revives NGO to explain 1Malaysia

Govt revives NGO to explain 1Malaysia
24 Jun 09 : 8.00AM
By Deborah Loh
deborahloh@thenutgraph.comdeborahloh at
thenutgraph dot comPrinter Friendly Format

PETALING JAYA, 24 June 2009: Concerned about misunderstandings over 1Malaysia, the government has revived a non-governmental organisation (NGO), Tabung Amanah Muhibah (Tamu), to explain the concept to the public. Tamu executive director Datuk Dahan Abdul Latiff said the NGO was given its new mandate in April , after Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak announced his 1Malaysia, People First, Performance Now philosophy. Najib became prime minister on 3 April this year. Dahan said Tamu's role was to explain 1Malaysia from the perspective of fostering national unity, based on the explanation in Najib's blog.

Ever since Najib announced the concept, various quarters have criticised or expressed confusion over what 1Malaysia is. The opposition has ridiculed it by highlighting injustices, lack of transparency and racial discrimination, while civil society has subverted it with the 1BLACKMalaysia campaign to protest the Barisan Nasional's takeover of the Perak government.Even former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who came up with the "Bangsa Malaysia" idea under his Vision 2020 mission statement, said he did not know what 1Malaysia meant.

Dahan said Tamu had already held discussions on 1Malaysia with Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman and Universiti Islam Malaysia. Other NGOs Tamu have reached out to are the Former People's Representatives Council Malaysia (Mubarak) Kuala Lumpur, and Gagasan Veteran Malaysia, which is headed by former chief secretary to the government Tun Ahmad Sarji Abdul Hamid. "Talks with other groups are being arranged," Dahan told The Nut Graph. He was met at a roundtable to discuss national unity that was organised by Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia's Institute for Ethnic Studies (Kita) on 18 June 2009.

Tamu already existed last year as a charity organisation but Dahan said it did not have many activities.

Negative response

Asked about the negative public response to 1Malaysia, he said it was typical of the current anti-government feelings people had after the 2008 general election. "People are still in that mood. Anything the government says, they oppose it. Whenever the government proposes something, there is always opposition. It's just the sentiment for the time being," Dahan said. On fostering better race relations, he said Tamu wanted to work with UKM's Kita in developing national unity programmes

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Malaysian NGO to set up four mobile clinics in Sri Lanka

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Kuala Lumpur (PTI): A Malaysian NGO will set up four mobile clinics in Sri Lanka's embattled northern district of Vavuniya to provide healthcare facilities for fleeing Tamil civilians. The clinics, funded and equipped by Non Governmental Organisation 'MERCY', will be manned by Sri Lankan doctors in the high-security camps, where over 150,000 IDP are now being housed safely.
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The mobile clinics will offer extended primary healthcare for thousands of internally displaced people (IDP) at Cheddukulam of Vavuniya District. "There is an urgent need for healthcare in these camps. We were invited by the Health Ministry of Sri Lanka to run this project in these camps. Our four posts will cater for about 100,000 IDP," national news agency Bernama quoted Elliane Arriany Mustapha, MERY's programme officer, as saying.
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"We will fully equip these health posts and once completed, local doctors will run the day-to-day operations," she said adding that the NGO is still raising funds to start a second project in Sri Lanka. Each health post will be equipped with beds, minor surgery paraphernalia, medical kits and ECG machine. MERCY volunteers, including doctors, water engineer, electricians and logistic personnel arrived in Sri Lanka in early April to begin the humanitarian project for war victims who began to pour into Menik Farm, the largest site in the north that shelters escapees.
FROM THE HINDU.

UN faces fierce clash over call for Sri Lanka war crimes inquiry

From The Times
May 26, 2009
UN faces fierce clash over call for Sri Lanka war crimes inquiry

Sri Lanka is to clash with Western powers at the United Nations Human Rights Council today in an effort to ward off any investigation into alleged war crimes committed during its military offensive against the Tamil Tigers. The country has marshalled a team of powerful allies led by China, Russia and India to fight off a European-backed resolution at today’s special session on Sri Lanka calling for an inquiry into abuses on both sides of the conflict.

Observers at yesterday’s preliminary meeting in Geneva, which was described as acrimonious, said that the 47-member Council was divided over the European resolution, with 18 countries for and 18 against. The other nine are undecided. The division sets the stage for a session today that will test the very purpose of the Human Rights Council. Israel, which had an investigation into its Gaza offensive forced on to it by the Council, is furious at the prospect of Sri Lanka escaping the same fate.

Related Links
Velupillai Prabhakaran
Horror of war in Sri Lanka's 'no-fire zone'
200,000 Tamil civilians imprisoned in camp

The European resolution that Sri Lanka is aiming to defeat has already drawn the ire of human rights groups for failing to push for an international war crimes inquiry. It calls on the Sri Lanka Government to conduct its own investigation into breaches of international law and allow unfettered access to camps where more than 200,000 displaced Tamil civilians are detained.

Sri Lanka has submitted a counter-resolution, sponsored by at least 14 allies, in which it praises its own Government for liberating civilians and urges the international community to offer it more financial assistance. The two competing agendas clashed in the preliminary meeting when an Asian bloc led by India, Pakistan and Malaysia argued for today’s special session to be abandoned altogether. India, China and Egypt walked out of the meeting after this was refused.

Sri Lanka goes into today’s meeting backed by powerful new allies such as China, which provided much of the military hardware for the final offensive that defeated the Tamil Tigers last week after a 25-year war. The Tigers formally acknowledged yesterday that their leader, Vellupillai Prabhakaran, was among the dead.

Several undecided countries, including Chile and Mexico, are pressing for a compromise resolution incorporating elements of both drafts. Whichever resolution makes it to a vote must be passed by a simple majority. Unlike on the UN Security Council, no country can veto a resolution. Observers said that the outcome was “still in play”, due in part, to the lack of independent assessments about the situation in Sri Lanka.

The Government’s decision to ban all journalists, aid workers and other independent observers from the conflict zone and restrict access to the camps where displaced Tamil civilians have been detained has meant that information about what happened has been slow to emerge. The Times was among the first small group of journalists to see the “no-fire zone” on Saturday while accompanying Ban Ki Moon, the UN Secretary-General, on a helicopter flight. Afterwards Mr Ban said that the sight was the most appalling scene he had come across in his long international career.

Selamat Menyambut Perayaan Pesta Menuai.

Kepada:
Seluruh Masyarakat KadazanDusun
di Malaysia dan di mana jua berada.
(klik untuk imej yang jelas dan bersaiz besar)
Semoga ikatan silatulrahim dan semangat perpaduan yang kukuh
antara kita semua sentiasa terjalin
SELAMAT MERAYAKAN PESTA KAAMATAN
"KOPIVASIAN TADAU TAGAZO DO KAAMATAN"
DARIPADA
Ahli Majlis Tertinggi USBO
dan Masyarakat yang diwakilinya

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