Archive for July, 2011



14
Jul

Siri Jelajah Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim ke Terengganu / Kelantan

DEMI RAKYAT

15 Julai 2011 (Jumaat)

Program 1 – Besut, Terengganu

9.00 – 12.00 Mlm – Ceramah Perdana – Demi Rakyat

Lokasi : – Kampong Amir , Alor Lintang, Besut

Penceramah:

1. YB Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim

2. YB Azan Ismail

3. YB Khalid Samad

Program 2 – Tanah Merah, Kelantan

9.00 – 12.00 Mlm – Ceramah Perdana – Demi Rakyat

Lokasi :- Padang Majlis Daerah Tanah Merah, Kelantan

Penceramah:

1. YAB Tuan Guru Nik Aziz Nik Mat

2. YB Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim

3. YB Saifuddin Nasution

4. YB Husam Musa

5. YB Amran Abdul Ghani

14
Jul

Bersih 2.0: Human Rights Watch Gesa Putrajaya Adakan Siasatan Terbuka

The Malaysian Insider

Kerajaan Malaysia perlu mengadakan sisasatan yang telus dan terbuka dengan segera mengenai dakwaan penggunaan pendekatan keras dalam menangani perhimpunan anjuran Bersih 2.0 Sabtu lalu, kata badan pemantau antarabangsa Human Rights Watch hari ini.

Timbalan pengarah rantau Asia Human Rights Watch, Phil Robertson, berkata pentadbiran Najib juga sewajarnya menghentikan segala bentuk ugutan dan tindakan menakut-nakutkan pihak penganjur, dan pada masa yang sama membebaskan kesemua mereka yang ditahan.

“Tindakan pihak berkuasa menghalang perhimpunan Bersih menunjukkan bahawa kebebasan asas kini bertembung dengan kuasa pemerintah,” kata Robertson sambil menambah bahawa kerajaan tidak menghormati ruang hak asasi.

“Nampaknya di Malaysia, kebebasan bersuara, berhimpun dan berpersatuan hanya dibenarkan apabila mereka (peserta perhimpunan) menyokong pihak kerajaan,” kata beliau dalam satu kenyataan.

Selepas kerajaan tidak berkompromi dengan hasrat penganjur mahu menggunakan Stadium Merdeka, penyokong-penyokong Bersih 2.0 turun di jalan untuk mengadakan perarakan aman ke stadium tersebut.

Bagaimanapun pihak polis menyambut mereka dengan air berasid dan gas pemedih mata selain menahan 1,697 orang.

Selain itu pihak polis juga masih menahan enam pemimpin Parti Sosialis Malaysia di bawah Ordinan Darurat.

Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak mempertahankan tindakan polis manakala Ketua Polis Negara Tan Sri Ismail Omar (gambar) pula menafikan pasukan polis yang menyerang peserta terlebih dahulu.

Pada Isnin lalu, Menteri Dalam Negeri Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein, mengugut untuk menggambil tindakan ke atas media domestik dan antarabangsa atas alasan laporan-laporan yang tidak berasas.

Menurut Robertson, janji kerajaan Malaysia untuk memenuhi obligasi antarabangsa sebagai anggota Majlis Hak Asasi Manusia PBB berhadapan dengan ujian sejak kebelakangan ini.

“Rakan-rakan antarabangsa Malaysia perlu memberitahu Perdana Menteri Najib bahawa beliau sedang menerajui negara di laluan yang salah,” katanya lagi.

14
Jul

Selangor Tolak Diskriminasi Gender

Kenyataan Media
13 Julai 2011
Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Tetap
Hal Ehwal Wanita Negeri Selangor,
Y.B. Rodziah Ismail

Selangor Tolak Diskriminasi Gender

Kerajaan Negeri Selangor bersikap tidak toleran terhadap diskriminasi gender. Ciri masyarakat madani yang berintipatikan layanan yang saksama berasaskan perlembagaan adalah pengiktirafan terhadap hak seseorang individu, tanpa mengira lelaki ataupun wanita.

Justeru, Kerajaan Negeri Selangor menyambut baik keputusan Hakim Zaleha Yusof di Mahkamah Tinggi Shah Alam pada 12 Julai 2011 yang memberikan keadilan kepada Noorfadilla Ahmad Saikin dalam kes diskriminasi gender yang mana telah ditarik balik tawaran pekerjaan sebagai guru sandaran tidak terlatih kepada beliau pada tahun 2009 lalu atas alasan hamil. Ia adalah kes dan keputusan mahkamah yang julung kali berlaku dan menandakan era baru dalam lembaran hak asasi manusia, khususnya dalam keadilan dan kesaksamaan gender di Malaysia. Continue reading ‘Selangor Tolak Diskriminasi Gender’

14
Jul

Doktor Bidas Polis Kerana Serangan di Hospital

Malaysiakini

Sekumpulan doktor kanan dan pakar perubatan telah mengeluarkan kenyataan membidas kerajaan berhubung ‘serangan polis’ ke atas peserta perhimpunan BERSIH 2.0 Sabtu lalu di dua buah hospital.

Sehubungan itu, dalam satu kenyataan media kepada organ rasmi PAS Harakahdaily hari ini, doktor berkenaan yang bertugas di Hospital Tung Shin dan Hospital Bersalin Cina di Jalan Pudu berkata mereka akan mengemukakan afidavit bagi menyokong hujah bahawa hospital diserang.

Mereka mendakwa tindakan polis pada Sabtu lalu jelas mencabul pengiktirafan antarabangsa apabila hospital sebagai tempat santuari diserang.

Malah menurut sebeles doktor berkenaan, semasa peperangan hospital juga tidak akan diserang tetapi dalam kes di Malaysia, polis memasuki bangunan hospital bagi mencari peserta yang melarikan diri daripada tembakan gas pemedih mata dan pancutan air berkimia.

“Apa yang paling menakutkan dan disaksikan ramai bahawa serangan yang tidak dihasut itu berlaku di kawasan hospital dan beberapa peserta masuk ke hospital bagi mencari perlindungan daripada tembakan gas pemedih mata dan pancutan meriam air,” kata mereka.

Ini adalah reaksi pertama oleh sekumpulan pakar perubatan berikutan penafian pihak polis dan kerajaan bahawa tidak ada gas pemedih mata dilontarkan ke perkarangan hospital pada 9 Julai lalu.
Isnin lalu, menteri kesihatan Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai berkata polis tidak menembak gas pemedih mata dan meriam air ke arah Hospital Tung Shin ketika menyuraikan perhimpunan BERSIH 2.0.

Katanya, dakwaan yang berlegar di media internet berhubung tembakan ke arah hospital itu adalah tidak benar.

Liow juga berkata sebenarnya polis menembak gas pemedih mata itu ke arah jalan besar dan asap berkenaan mungkin dibawa angin ke arah hospital berkenaan.

Beberapa rakaman video dan gambar yang dikemukakan terus diperlekehkan oleh kerajaan termasuk anggota jemaah menteri.

Menurut kesebelas-sebelas doktor berkenaan, pihak berkuasa tanpa rasa malu terus menafikan serangan itu di sebalik pelbagai bukti yang dikemukakan dan ramai saksi yang tampil membuat pengakuan.

Kenyataan media itu ditandatangani oleh Dr Musa Nordin, Dr Sheikh Johari Bux, Dr Ng Kwee Boon, Dr Ng Swee Choon, Dr Ronald Macoy, Dr David Quek, Dr Mary Cardozo, Dr Farouk Musa, Dr Mazeni Alwi, Dr Pixie Low dan Dr Steve Wong.

“Adalah menjijikkan pihak berkuasa yang diamanahkan tanggungjawab kepolisian menjaga negara dan melindungi mereka yang lemah, tanpa rasa malu menafikan perbuatan mereka secara umum, di sebalik kejadian itu disokong banyak gambar, video dan pengakuan saksi termasuk pemerhati berkecuali,” kata mereka.

Doktor-doktor itu berkata mereka tidak berhasrat menyertai polemik selepas perhimpunan itu, tetapi sebahagian daripada mereka yang sedang bertugas ketika kejadian, bersedia memberi keterangan bersumpah, jika diperlukan bagi memberitahu apa yang sebenarnya berlaku.

[Baca berita penuh]

13
Jul

Investing 101 Means Looking Out The Windows More: William Pesek

bloomberg.com
By William Pesek

Arab Spring, meet Malaysia’s summer of discontent.

That thought is surely on Prime Minister Najib Razak’s mind as the dust settles from Saturday’s botched demonstrations in Kuala Lumpur. By “botched” I mean the way Najib mishandled what should have been a ho-hum political-reform rally of little note by the international news media.

Public-relations experts would have told Najib to let the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections have their day in the capital. Let them wave signs and wear their yellow shirts. Instead, he tried to stop the rally, increasing its size. Then, he cracked down. Police fired tear gas and detained 1,697 people, turning the event into a top cable TV news story.

The over-the-top response did something worse: It enraged Malaysians who weren’t all that interested in rallying before Saturday. It also underlined the rise in political risk sweeping Asia, something that investors would be wise to track.

No serious observer expects an exact Asian rerun of the Arab Spring movement that saw uprisings topple leaders in Egypt and Tunisia and threaten regimes in Syria, Libya and Yemen. But then neither do serious people argue that Asia has done enough to enhance its democratic credentials during the past 10 years.

Political Change

Malaysia’s protest was the biggest since 2007 — roughly 20,000 people. It came amid rising calls for political change from Thailand to China. What these nations have in common is that the overhaul in domestic political systems lags behind economic and financial reforms.

Take Thailand, where voters this month ejected the incumbent Democratic Party, which had used soldiers to disperse opposition protests in 2010, leading to more than 90 deaths. The party had promised to attack the corruption and undemocratic ways of the government run by Thaksin Shinawatra that soldiers ousted in 2006. Last week, fed up voters went full circle, making Thaksin’s sister premier.

Officials in China are pulling out all the stops to clamp down on political activists amid the so-called Jasmine Revolution. Nothing unnerves the Communist Party in Beijing more than the specter of social discontent. The winds of change are even sweeping Singapore; its ruling party in May won its narrowest election victory since independence in 1963.

Common Threads

Although the causes of such tension differ from country to country, there are a few common threads. One is the frustration of the have-nots as they watch the haves get richer. Another is rising global commodity prices, which make it harder for many to make ends meet. Finally, political modernization has been slower than critics hoped.

Malaysia’s case is especially complicated thanks to the inescapable issue of race. The conventional wisdom is that Saturday’s protests will delay Najib’s pledge to dismantle a 40- year preferential program that favors the Malay majority. The policy makes it harder for Chinese and Indian Malaysians to find good jobs, and its quotas scare away foreign investors. It holds Malaysia back in an increasingly competitive world.

To me, Najib wasn’t moving fast enough before Saturday. Foreign executives considering whether to build a factory in Malaysia want a clear schedule: By Jan. 1, 2012, we will do this, and by Jan. 1, 2013, we will do that. Instead, Najib offered vague intentions without meaningful or specific goals.
Misplaced Priorities

It’s no mystery why. All that matters to the United Malays National Political Organisation is clinging to its five-decade hold on power. Such misplaced priorities explain why Malaysia has been slow to streamline the economy and encourage the kind of entrepreneurialism that creates well-paid jobs. It’s also why leaders are timid about scrapping productivity-killing policies that only benefit portions of the population.

The question now is which way Najib turns. At this point, he may avoid calling an early election this year — there’s just too much risk for him. Which direction he takes in changing policy is an even bigger unknown. On July 10, the Guardian newspaper carried comments by Najib in which he cautioned protesters not to test his party’s will. “We can conquer Kuala Lumpur,” he said.

What can we make of a leader who promised reform and moderation and now sounds like a Roman emperor? Can a nation that arrests almost 1,700 people, some just for wearing yellow shirts, still be called a democracy? Najib’s response even had Malaysians feeling sorry for opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who was injured by flying tear gas canisters.

Events in Kuala Lumpur remind us that geopolitical risks are on the rise in Asia. Yes, growth rates are healthy even as the U.S., Japan and Europe limp along. The establishment of democratic institutions has been far less robust, though, and entrenched leaders may pay a considerable price. Maybe not in the Hosni Mubarak-sense, but the potential for upheaval shouldn’t be underestimated. There really is a bull market in the desire for political change.

Investors looking for places to put their money tend to lock themselves in offices combing through statistics, bond spreads, stock valuations and central-bank policies. In Asia’s case, more success might be had by looking out the window at the street demonstrations below

13
Jul

Kenali ‘Wirawati’ BERSIH 2.0 – Makcik Anne

Malaysiakini

Antara ratusan gambar dan video yang merakamkan BERSIH 2.0 – satu yang agak menonjol – ia memaparkan seorang wanita berpakian kuning yang basah kuyup sambil memegang sejambak bunga kekwa putih.

NONEWanita itu adalah sorang bekas guru bahasa Inggeris, Anne Ooi, 65 tahun yang terkena pancutan air berkimia polis di luar bangunan Hospital Tung Shin di ibu negara Sabtu lalu.

Di alam siber, beliau kini dilabel sebagai ‘Makcik BERSIH’ ataupun ‘Lady of Liberty’ Malaysia.

Menurut jurugambar Hugo Teng yang merakamkan gambar itu, beliau terlihat wanita itu melarikan dirinya ke arah Wisma Magnum dari Hospital Bersalin Cina supaya tidak ditangkap oleh polis.

Hospital Bersalin Cina itu terletak bersebelahan Hospital Tung Shin Hospital, manakala Wisma Magnum pula terletak bertentangan dua hospital di Jalan Pudu, Kuala Lumpur.

“Saya sedang cuba ke Hospital Bersalin Cina tetapi ternampak anggota polis meluru mengejar orang ramai, jadi saya bertukar fikiran dan berlari ke Wisma Magnum. Dalam perjalanan saya terlihat seorang wanita berusia yang dikejar oleh ramai polis pencegah rusuhan. Continue reading ‘Kenali ‘Wirawati’ BERSIH 2.0 – Makcik Anne’

13
Jul

PM Najib’s Tyranny Draws Focus On Bribes, Murder

The Philippine Star
By Jarius Bondoc

Whom the gods wish to destroy they first make . . . Mad it was for Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to prime the police into thinking days prior that last Saturday’s opposition protest in Kuala Lumpur was illegal, and that seized firebomb stashes would have been used. Madder still, for him to have the 20,000 marchers tear-gassed and 1,667 arrested.

The rally was to call for electoral reforms, a domestic issue that attracted only the Malaysian press. But when riot squads aimed teargas canisters at opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s head, actually hitting his aide’s eye, and causing the fatal heart attack of one demonstrator, the event drew world attention. Now international groups are denouncing the mayhem as proof of Najib’s disregard for human rights. Worse, there’s sudden global interest in an imminent subpoena of Najib to a Paris trial on kickbacks in purchasing three French submarines in 2002, and the consequent murder of a Mongolian socialite in 2006.

Malaysia’s parliament will have no choice but to take up the brutal dispersal. Najib’s home minister’s claim has been debunked that police performed their duties “with bravery, fairness and integrity.” Narratives jibe that marchers were on their way to a downtown stadium from different parts of the capital when confronted with teargas and chemical-laced water cannons. Even if the storm does not affect next year’s setting of national polls, the fallout predictably will hurt Najib.

Najib allegedly has concocted sexcapades to bring down arch foe Anwar. Not only has the scheme backfired, Najib is now himself under fire for immorality. Trial is to begin of French arms giant DCN-Armaris for bribery in the 2002 submarine sale to Malaysia through then-defense minister Najib. Commissions supposedly came in three tranches: first euro 30 million upon contract signing, then euro 114 million subcontracted to an unknown firm owned by Najib’s security adviser Razak Baginda, and last euro 2.5 million. From reports, Najib, Baginda, and their purported shared Mongolian girlfriend Altantuya Sharibu motored around France after sealing the deal. Najib and now London-based Baginda will be summoned to Paris as soon as a judge is assigned to the case this month or next.

The bribery worsened into kidnapping-murder when Altantuya raucously tried to collect her euro 350,000-share from Baginda in 2006. Najib’s jealous wife Rosmah forbade the men from paying her a single cent, provoking Altantuya to picket their manor. Two Najib bodyguards abducted the pregnant Altantuya, shot her dead in the woods, and burned the corpse with military explosives. Party mates nevertheless made Najib prime minister in 2009. The bodyguards confessed and were convicted last year; Baginda was acquitted. Prosecutors, defense lawyers, and the judge were forbidden from mentioning the sleazy submarine deal during the trial. Still, Najib got an international black eye.

France has no power to compel the attendance of Najib or Baginda. But it can demand the truth from DCN-Armaris. The Malaysia Chronicle recently quoted Kuala Lumpur politicians as saying that if Najib snubs the trial he would in effect tell the world that he’s guilty as charged.

And the world will be watching, now that Najib has turned the spotlight on himself with last weekend’s tyrannical squashing of dissent.

13
Jul

Nasib Flotilla II Sama Dengan Bersih 2.0

Harakah
Oleh Subky Latif

SAYA terharu membaca laporan rombongan misi kemanusiaan ke Gaza dan rintihan Ketua Pemuda UMNO Khairy Jamaluddin yang terkandas di perairan Greece.

Bukan saja rombongan pelayaran Freedom Flottila 11 dihalang untuk datang ke Gaza, maka kapal-kapal konvoi yang berlabuh di perairan Greece tidak benarkan oleh kerajaannya meninggalkan pelabuhan mereka.

Ada kapal yang cuba meninggalkan perairan itu tanpa izin kerajan Athen tetapi ia telah dipaksa pulang ke pelabuhan transitnya.

Rombongan itu mendesak sokongan antarabangsa supaya menekan Greece membenarkan mereka meninggalkan perairannya bagi menuju Gaza, tetapi Greece bertindak tegas tidak membenarkannya.

Reaksi Greece itu adalah atas larangan regim Israil dan apa lagi Amerika adalah menyebalahi Israil. Walau pun Setiausaha Agung Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu menyokong rombongan kemanusiaan itu, tetapi apabila Amerika mmihak kepada Israil adalah sukar bagi Greece yang berdepan dengan krisis hutang sekarang menimbangkan pemergian rombongan Freedom Flottila itu. Continue reading ‘Nasib Flotilla II Sama Dengan Bersih 2.0′

13
Jul

Raja Aziz Addruse Meninggal Dunia

KeadilanDaily

Peguam tersohor, Raja Aziz Addruse, 75, meninggal dunia di kediamannya di ibu negara tengah hari tadi, akibat penyakit barah.

Allahyarham pernah menjadi Presiden Majlis Peguam sebanyak tiga kali iaitu 1976-1978, 1988-1989 dan 1992-1993.

Peguam terkenal itu juga pernah mewakili beberapa tokoh ternama termasuk Ketua Umum Parti Keadilan Rakyat, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim dalam kes fitnah yang dihadapinya pada 1998.

Raja Aziz turut disenarai seorang daripada 13 peguam yang mewakili Anwar bagi tuduhan fitnah dan kes konspirasi kedua yang dihadapi ketua pembangkang itu.

Jenazah allahyarham kini ditempatkan di kediamannya di Bukit Kenny dan dijadual dikebumikan di tanah perkuburan Islam Bukit Kiara selepas disolatkan. Al- Fatihah.

13
Jul

Saksi BERSIH Mengadu Pada Suhakam

Malaysiakini

Suruhanjaya Hak Asasi Manusia (Suhakam) hari ini mendengar aduan daripada beberapa orang awam yang mendakwa terdapat keganasan polis dalam perhimpunan BERSIH 2.0 Sabtu lalu.

Hadir bersama pemimpin Pemuda PAS, beberapa saksi kejadian tampil menceritakan pengalaman mereka kepada suruhanjaya itu.

Menurut seorang pembantu doktor Abu Bakar Abdul Rahman, dalam perhimpunan itu, beliau menyaksikan sendiri berlakunya polis menyalahgunakan kuasa mereka.

Dengan sebak, pengamal perubatan itu berkata, terdapat peserta yang sedang “bersujud” di atas jalan raya ditendang oleh polis dengan sengaja.

“Saya tidak nampak apa kesalahan yang dia buat, saya rasa dia (polis) hilang ingatan masa itu,” dakwanya.

Dakwanya, beliau juga melihat beberapa peserta perhimpunan yang dibelasah sehingga patah kaki dan tidak mendapat sebarang bantuan daripada polis.

Minta nyawa

Sementara itu Pengerusi Angkatan Warga Aman Malaysia (AMAN) Rajaretinam Armuggan pula menceritakan detik-detik terakhirnya berada di sisi Baharuddin Ahmad yang dilaporkan meninggal dunia selepas hadir ke perhimpunan itu.

“Saya nampak dia pegang dada dia. Ada dua pegawai polis di depan. Saya merayu tapi mereka menolak untuk bercakap (dengan saya),” katanya.
“Kesilapan saya tidak ambil nombor (baju) polis tersebut.”

Seorang lagi saksi Nurpais Ismail mendakwa pihak polis melemparkan banyak tembakan gas pemedih mata ketika orang ramai berkumpul di Masjid Jamek sehingga menyebabkan seorang warga emas sesak nafas.

“Ada mak cik, pak cik, saya lihat ada seorang mak cik seolah-olah meminta nyawa (sukar bernafas),” katanya yang turut ditahan polis tanpa dimaklumkan kesalahan yang dilakukan.

Sementara seorang peguam PAS Mazwan Johar yang bertugas memantau keadaan di balai polis Jinjang pada Sabtu lalu mengesyaki polis ingin menyembunyikan sesuatu apabila kebanyakan mereka memakai jaket yang menutup nombor bajunya.

Halang kebebasan agama

“Jaket tersebut menutup tanda nama dan pangkat mereka. Kami sebagai peguam yang tahu apa yang perlu dibuat pun, tidak dapat berbuat apa-apa (sebab tidak tahu identiti polis itu),” katanya.

Sementara itu, Pengarah Jabatan Undang-undang dan Hak Asasi Malaysia (Juham), Ahmad Zamri Asa’ad Khuzaimi mendakwa anggota Unit Simpanan Persekutuan (FRU) menggunakan “kekerasaan yang tidak munasabah” untuk menyuraikan peserta.

Beliau juga mendakwa, tindakan polis menghalang peserta perhimpunan memasuki dua masjid utama di Kuala Lumpur – Masjid Negara dan Masjid Jamek – menghalang kebebasan beragama seperti dijamin dalam perlembagaan.

“Masjid Jamek dan masjid negara telah dikunci oleh pihak polis. Mereka (peserta himpunan) terpaksa sembahyang di kaki-kaki lima, di bawah pokok seperti keadaan di luar negara,” katanya.

Sementara itu, Ketua Pemuda PAS Nasrudin Hassan menyerahkan memorandum kepada Suhakam yang mendakwa polis menafikan akses peguam kepada peserta yang ditahan.

Memorandum enam helai itu diterima oleh Naib Pengerusi Suhakam Prof Datuk Dr Khaw Lake Tee. Kira-kira 50 penyokong PAS dan aktivis NGO turut hadir memberikan sokongan

13
Jul

Bar Council: Tung Shin Hospital Was Hit

Malaysiakini

Even with Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai vehemently denying that the police had fired tear gas and chemical-laced water into Tung Shin Hospital during last Saturday’s rally, the Bar Council monitoring team is backing the many witness accounts that this did happen.

Presenting the observation report compiled from some 100 observers deployed during the rally, Bar Council president Lim Chee Wee said police had used indiscriminate and excessive tear gas and water cannons against peaceful protesters.

Water from the cannons fired by the police, Lim told a press conference at Bar Council office in Kuala Lumpur today, went into the compound of Tung Shin Hospital, and according to eyewitness accounts, tear gas canisters also landed in the compound.
“Although we don’t have any footage from our monitoring team, accounts from our eyewitnesses say ‘yes, tear gas was launched and canisters did land in the Tung Shin premises’.”

Lim also screened footage taken by an observer, showing the hospital being hit by water cannons during the rally

According to the report, the participants were hit by water cannons while the rally organisers were negotiating with the police.

“Some monitors noted that the police did give warnings prior to using the tear gas and water cannons. However, it was difficult for the huge crowd to hear what the police commandants said via their loud hailers, except for participants who were situated near the police,” the report says.

Elaborating on the Bar Council report, Lim said the use of tear gas and water cannons was “wholly unnecessary” in many locations when the crowd was stationary and showed no indication that they would charge the police or create any havoc.

No warning, not enough time to disperse Continue reading ‘Bar Council: Tung Shin Hospital Was Hit’

13
Jul

Program Naib Presiden-YB Nurul Izzah Anwar [ 15-23 JULAI 2011 ]

1) Ceramah di Cabang Keadilan Kuala Kangsar, Perak pada 15 Jun 2011 ( Jumaat )

Tarikh : 15 Jun 2011 ( Jumaat )
Masa : 7.00 hingga 12.00 malam
Tempat : Kampong Bendang Kering, Kuala Kangsar, Perak

7.00 Malam Berkumpul di Masjid Bendang Kering
7.30 Malam Solat Jemaah Maghrib
7.50 Malam Kuliah Maghrib AF Ustaz Munawir
8.50 Malam Solat Isyak
9.10 Malam Jamuan Malam
9.30 Malam Ceramah Umum

Penceramah :

1) Ust Zulkipli Ibrahim,Ketua Penerangan PKR Perak

2) Dr.Raja Iskandar,YDP PAS Kawasan

3) YB Nurul Izzah, Naib Presiden PKR merangkap Ahli Parlimen Lembah Pantai

4) Dr Mohd Nor Manuty,Pengerusi MPN Perak merangkap Pengarah Penerangan PKR Pusat. Continue reading ‘Program Naib Presiden-YB Nurul Izzah Anwar [ 15-23 JULAI 2011 ]‘