My Persaraan

Friday, December 04, 2009

Yim’s sentence cut to 12 years

This is what happened when you have money ....... No, she didn't buy her way out, but the money she had, has been spent to buy time in and out of court, justice on the other hand must be seen being done with each and every appeal that is made. Just imagine without the amount of money she has spent, she would have been in jail years ago. Luckily, our judiciary system allows both side to appeal and the prosecutor is just using the right thing..... I just want to see justice done. Ini baru dunia.... belum akhirat lagi!

Yim’s sentence cut to 12 years

KUALA LUMPUR: Housewife Yim Pek Ha who was convicted of causing grievous hurt to Indonesian maid Nirmala Bonat five years ago has had her sentence reduced to 12 years.

Judicial Commissioner Azman Abdullah reduced her sentence from 18 years to five years for each of two charges of causing hurt to Nirmala using an iron in January 2004 and hot water in March 2004 when he decided on her appeal.

Bad day: Yim sobbing while her husband and Jagjit try to console her after the court’s decision yesterday.

He acquitted Yim of the third charge of causing hurt to Nirmala with an iron in April 2004 on technical grounds.

The judge overturned an acquittal by the Sessions Court on her fourth charge of breaking the maid’s nose with a steel cup and sentenced her to another two years’ jail.

The judge allowed a cross-appeal by the prosecution and ordered her sentence to run consecutively.

Yim, 41, who was at the court yesterday, was already seen teary-eyed even before her case started.

Read more ....

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Ibadah Berqurban Sempena Hari Raya Aidil Adha

Qurban atau Udhiah bermaksud menyembelih haiwan yang tertentu jenisnya daripada ternakan yang dikategorikan sebagai al-an'am iaitu unta, lembu (termasuk kerbau), biri-biri dan kambing pada Hari Nahr atau Hari Raya Haji (10 Zulhijjah) dan pada hari-hari Tasyrik (11,12 dan 13 Zulhijjah) kerana bertaqarrub (mendekatkan diri) kepada Allah.

HUKUM MELAKUKAN IBADAH QURBAN

  • Imam Syafie berpendapat hukum melakukan ibadah qurban ini adalah sunat Muakkadah iaitu sunah yang amat digalakkan atau dituntut ke atas setiap individu Muslim yang merdeka, berakal, baligh lagi rasyid serta berkemampuan melakukannya sama ada sedang mengerjakan haji ataupun tidak sekurang-kurangnya sekali seumur hidup.

  • Makruh meninggalkan ibadah ini bagi orang yang mampu melakukannya.

  • Hukum qurban ini menjadikan wajib jika seseorang itu telah bernazar untuk melakukannnya atau telah membuat penentuan (at-ta'yin) untuk melaksanakannya seperti seseorang berkata "lembu ini aku jadikan qurban". Jika tidak dilakukan dalam keadaan ini maka hukumnya adalah haram.

  • Daging qurban wajib tidak dibenarkan untuk dimakan oleh yang empunya qurban dan tanggungannya.

Monday, October 12, 2009

It's Snowing


Depan rumah day one......

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Al-Fatihah

Sekalung doa buat adinda Abdul Halim bin Mohamed Ibrahim yang telah kembali ke rahmatullah selepas Maghrib pada 09-10-09. Semoga rohnya dihimpunkan di kalangan solihin dan dirahmati Allah juanya. Amin

Friday, October 09, 2009

Raya 2009

Raya Gathering 2009

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

"Spidey" fined RM2,000 for trespassing Petronas Twin Towers



Report from TheStar today




French “Spiderman” Robert Alain Philippe was fined RM2,000 after he pleaded guilty to criminal trespass for scaling the Petronas Twin Towers.
The 47-year-old was fined the amount in default of two months jail at the KL magistrate’s court on Wednesday.
The fine was set by magistrate Siti Shakirah Mohtaruddin after he pled guilty to criminally trespassing a building belonging to Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre at Jalan Ampang here, a crime punishable under Section 447 of the Penal Code.
French “Spiderman” Robert Alain Philippe let off with a fine of RM2,000.
He scaled Tower 2 of the Twin Towers at about 8.30am on Tuesday in his third attempt to conquer the building, and succeeded about two hours later.
Dressed in dark grey pants and a teal jacket, he was brought into the dock in handcuffs.
His lawyer Wong Kian Kheong, in pleading for a lower sentence, told the court that Philippe was only climbing out of passion.
"Everyone has a passion and my client's passion is to climb tall buildings.
"He is not doing so for profit or publicity, he has caused no injury to the complainant, nor has he caused any damage to the property," he said.
Wong added that his client had decided not to climb anymore buildings in the city so there was no fear of a repetition of his crime.
"He has a ticket to fly back to Paris on Sept 7," he said.
He added Philippe, a father of three children aged 16. 19 and 22, had also climbed for charity previously and had trained Malaysian fire fighters.
He also said the court should also take into consideration the fact that his client was certified as 60% disabled by French medical authorities, as a result of his climbing accidents.
Siti Shakirah, in handing down her ruling, said no custodial sentence was imposed as he was a first time offender.
"Spiderman" first tried to scale the building on March 20, 1997, and made a second unsuccessful attempt in 2007, after which he was freed without charge. Each time he reached the 60th storey before being intercepted by authorities.
He told reporters that he was "very happy" and that he was eyeing Dubai next.

Notable climbs
A few of the more than 70 skyscrapers and monuments climbed by Alain Robert
Sydney, Australia – Sydney Tower and the Sydney Opera House
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Hotel Vermont
Montreal, Quebec, Canada – Crown Plaza Hotel
Hong Kong The Far East Finance Centre The Cheung Kong Centre
London One Canada Square
Lloyd's building
Paris, France
Eiffel Tower
Grande Arche at La Défense
Obelisk in Place de la Concorde
Tour Montparnasse
Tour Cristal at Front De Seine
Mercurial Towers at Bagnolet
Frankfurt, Germany – Dresdner Bank Tower
Milan, Italy – Banca di Milano building
Tokyo, Japan – Shinjuku Center Building
Warsaw, Poland – Marriott Hotel
Johannesburg, South Africa – IBM Tower
Abu Dhabi
United Arab Emirates – National Bank of Abu Dhabi and the Etisalat building
Abu Dhabi Investment Authority [ADIA], Headquarters Building, UAE
United States of America
Empire State Building – New York City
Sears Tower – Chicago, Illinois
Golden Gate Bridge – San Francisco, California
Blue Cross Tower – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Luxor Hotel pyramid – Las Vegas, Nevada
Tampere, Finland – Hotel Ilves
Malaysia
Petronas Tower 1 – Kuala Lumpur (arrested at the 60th floor in 1997)
Petronas Tower 2 – Kuala Lumpur (arrested at the 60th floor in visit Malaysia year 2007)
Sabah Foundation Building – Kota Kinabalu, Sabah (for fund raising)
Melia Hotel – Kuala Lumpur
Taiwan – Taipei 101
Venezuela – Parque Central Torre
Barcelona – Torre Agbar
Lisbon – Torre Vasco da Gama
Mexico City- Santa Fé World Plaza Corporate Tower
Bratislava, Slovakia – Slovak Radio Building
Shanghai, China – Jin Mao Building

Sunday, August 30, 2009

KEPALA LEMBU

It's cow head, heading the headlines now..... go to this site to see the pictures of this madness.
The old Malay proverb did say that you have to clapped with both hands to hear the clapping sound. You can't clap with just one hand, hence, the problem started with something and ends up with this. Somebody is responsible, somebody must be blame and somebody will have to face the music.

Dancing to any tune after this won't keep the issue away. Though many have condemned the action of this few people, but still they need to voice out their frustration I guess. The use of the cow's head could suggest calling for more trouble, but at the same time, it caught the attention of almost everyone. Now its better for them to sit down and look again at the ugly drawing that they have made. Making a point is totally different than pointing a point sarcastically.

Maybe they should have use just the banner in their first outing before coming out with dangerous idea of kepala lembu. Cian kat lembu tu..... dia pula yang kena pijak. Very offending to others standing around watching but can't do anything. In the pictures, those people from the press, seems more interested of the cow head, rather than the man with the microphone.
Anyway, who is he ?

Friday, August 28, 2009

The Donkey and the Carrot

I read a child’s book the other day to my daughter about a Native man who needed help getting water and food up to his village in the mountain. The way was long and required more strength than this little man could give. He decided to use his donkey, which was small, but had the strength of ten men. He found that this task also did not appeal to the donkey, but knew that this would be his only way to get the supplies up the mountain.

He sat down to think about it, and an idea popped into his head. He grabbed a carrot from his bag and dangled it from a stick with some rope that he also had. Urging the donkey forward by holding the dangling carrot in front of its mouth, he was able to get the food and water up the mountain to his family before dinner. Thus began the “Stick and Carrot” or I'd better say it this way, "the donkey and the carrot" approach.

o There are a couple of things that make this work:

o The carrot must be sweet enough to be enticing

o The weight of the load must equal the worth of the carrot

The donkey must be hungry and of course stupid too, if not we won't call people who offended our intelligence, as donkeys.

Would this work for people....


Not in Sand Bund recently..........


Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Caning

In Islamic law, the cane should not be thicker than the little finger on the hand and that the cane cannot be lifted so high that the upper arm is lifted away from the armpit.

The above statement was what I was waiting for all this while to appear in a newspaper after the news of a Singaporean model was fined and ordered to be whipped ( or rather caned), and it has caused hue and cry among many, either they muslims or non muslims. Most who are not in favour of the punishment, though it can be considered contempt of the court, voice out their ignorance along with their logic of the case.

The accused was tried in a court, not in some kampung house, and she was represented with a lawyer. The trial was fair, and most of all, she admit and accepted the verdict, and ready to be punish by choosing not to appeal to the sentence. Salute to this lady in a way, because it take a 'man' to admit a mistake done in purpose. But I think she should ask for leniency, pardon maybe and just turned into a new leaf after this. Allah is a Forgiver, so why not.....

Almost all of us make some kind of mistake, which is punishable by law, or just any kind of law. For this lady, she was caught doing it, but for many of us we are never caught and so no punishment, no need to heir a lawyer to defend ourselves. We escape the law and we can only be lucky if we felt sorry for what we have done and repent sincerely not to break the law again. Right?

So, the part-time model was charged under Section 136 of the Pahang Islamic and Malay Traditional Practices Enactment 1982 (amendment 1987). (17 years old Law)

Under the section, those who are found guilty can be fined up to RM5,000 or jailed a maximum of three years, or both, and sentenced to six strokes of the rotan.

The sentence for consuming alcohol was made stiffer when the Islamic Religious Administration and Pahang Malay Tradition Enactment 1982 was amended in 1987.

It may be a harsh sentence, says Mahathir Mohamad, “Is not Islam merciful to first-time offenders?” Dr Mahathir asked, adding that fairness and consideration were the main tenets in Islam.
“We will be celebrating our independence this year by flogging a Muslim woman for drinking beer under Syariah law,” he said.
“Although the story has gone across the globe, Muslims should not worry about other people’s perceptions when dealing with matters of our religion despite the negative or positive image it might bring,” he added. (Yang ini I agree, sekali-sekali this man goes by the book juga, bukan akal dia saja)

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

At Ngarai Sianok
Lubang Jepang.... funny name, but this hole is 150 meters down and has something to do with the Japanese.
Usually greeted by the tourist guide who also works as a story teller or mayb a historian
Gunung Singgalang, hmmm maybe kot, that's the name... ha ha short memory, no wonder ckgu Hudzairi wrote everything in his notebook
A typiical scene of pop-out market whenever and wherever there are Malaysian women around
A typical Minangkabau's house, scarcely found
A embroidery class in action. The trainees stay in hostels undergoing traning for about six months. Every single items produce during training belongs to the training center
Bengkel Jahitan Hjh Rosmah
Tourist being offered a delicacy of Minang's sweetness upon arrival at Hjh Rosmah's


Spent two nights here in High Hills

Saturday, August 08, 2009

H1N1

Today, the newspaper reported another 3 death bringing the number of H1N1 fatalities to 18 in Malaysia.

Few days ago I caught a flu while in Langkawi. Realising that it must be my sinus, I kept attending every session and not wearing any mask. The persons next to me don't seem to mind. I was hoping they would ask me to stay in bed rather than be with them throughout the duration of the course. Maybe they like my company... hu hu ..

I did not sneeze though, but my nose seems to be melting away.

Now after 5 days, I'm back to normal and as usual enjoy my Saturday/Sunday morning walk.

Now this influenza is getting its hands on Malaysia, gripping every corner of the country with fear that it might get messy... lets hope and pray that in a few weeks time, we don't have to see people wearing masks anymore.....

Friday, July 24, 2009

Russian Boy Now...

A lapse of more than 2 months..... at last I'm back again. Trying to find interesting feeds to this blog but none came to my expectations.

Well the good news is lots of things happened during these few months, and the most important is none other than Akmal's 'migration' to Russia. Now he has to stay there not less than 5 years and not more (hopefully) 6 years. The young lad is pursuing his studies in Marine Engineering at State Marine Technology University in St Petersburg. He arrived there on the 29th of June after much planning and rushing to furnish all the needs and necessity to travel abroad. Some of the moment captured during sent off and the events after, are shown below. It's a relief to know that he's doing alright with the new surrounding. Me? I've nothing much to worry as he is surrounded with 20 others of the same fate. Now they have to live together for five an a half years together...















Saturday, July 11, 2009


NILAI CINTAMU - SUDIRMAN DALAM KENANGAN

NILAI CINTAMU

Pernah dulu kufikirkan
tanpa cinta tak mengapa
bila kau pergi kurasakan
sunyinya dihati
baru kini ku tahu
nilai cintamu

kurenungi gambarmu
kubaca surat surat mu
namun pedihnya ku terasa
tanpa kau bersama
kuharap dikau pun
begitu jua

kini aku mengerti
hanya engkau pelita hati
semua yang kau korbankan
hanyalah untukku
akan tetapku kenang
kasihmu terhadap diriku
janji untuk bersama
sehidup dan semati

andainya kau kembali
kan ku curahkan rasa hati
akan aku buktikan
cintaku yang suci
berikan ku harapan
untuk bersamamu semula
akan aku buktikan
nilai cintaku....

Che wahhh layannn......!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Who can tell?=============

One interesting story that I run across while scrolling one of Chedet's responses today...

Many years ago a wise peasant lived in China.

He had a son who was the gleam in his eyes and a white stallion which was his favourite belonging.

One day his horse escaped from his grounds and disappeared.

The villagers came to him one by one and said: “You are such an unlucky man. It is so bad about the horse.”
The peasant responded: “Who knows. Maybe it’s bad, maybe it’s good.”

The next day the stallion returned followed by 12 wild horses.
The neighbours visited him again and congratulated him for his luck.
He just said: “Who knows. Maybe it’s good, maybe it’s bad.”

As it happens, the next day his son was attempting to break in one of the wild horses when he fell down and broke his leg.
Once more everyone came with their condolences: “It’s terrible.”
Again he replied: “Who knows. Maybe it’s bad, maybe it’s good.”

A few days passed and his poor son was limping around the village with his broken leg, when the emperor’s army entered the village announcing that a war was starting and they conscripted all the young men of the village.
However, they left the peasant’s son since he had a broken leg.
Once more, everyone was so jealous of the peasant.
They talked about his sheer luck.

He just muttered: “Who knows. Maybe it’s good, maybe it’s bad..”

So it could well be for my broken laptop screen...... maybe it's good, maybe it's bad.. ha ha ha

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Pecah Skrin (Broken LCD Screen)

I like the title to this posting, because normally we would have said it the other way round, like.... Skrin Pecah....
Anyway, this pecah skrin episode is about something to do with an LCD computer screen of my Laptop, which unfortunately went underneath and drove over by my car. The driver was me, Luckily, it was in a computer bag, so only the screen couldn't be saved.

Want to know how it happened??

Well, this thing usually happen when u are careless enough to forget that you have something valuable to put in a car. So this careless person, wanted to free one of his hands, he just place this computer bag beside the back wheel of his car...since the other hand was holding to something else. The computer bag was leaning comfortably to the wheels... he ha he ha...... After putting in that something else on the back seat, he forgot the bag!!!, and shut the back door, get into the front seat and reversed the car!!!. Its like watching a horror movie, if he could see what was going on, but, u know.... the malay proverb that says, Sudah terantuk baru tengadah.... which literally means, when your head got bumped, then only you realize that you should have look up .. he he ha ha....

Whatever it is, the technician says, it will cost around 600 something ringgit, the Malaysian money... to replace the screen... and mind you.. its very easy to replace the screen the way they show it on You Tube.

Well, thats the price to pay for my carelessness......


The broken screen, still intact

Now I'm using it this way, connecting it to another screen, so sayang to send it away for repairs...

The day it happened... 16th March 2009... some would have said... "U ni tak mandi kot...."

and those people in DELL (maybe) are having another celebration... because one of their more than 3 years old notebook which was run over by a car can still fuction normally, except for the screen of course..

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Bushmen upset math and science not taught in Bushmen


I found this interesting laughable article while browsing today... just wanna share with you all out there...

CENTRAL KALAHARI — Bushmen leaders expressed their dissatisfaction today with the ongoing debate in Malaysia as to whether to continue teaching the subjects of Mathematics and Science in the English language, or revert back to doing it Bahasa Melayu.

Speaking from the main hut situated in the middle of the Nalu!ai village, the committee of the Tri-village Elders is unhappy that the Malaysian government had not considered the Bushmen language, the Khoisan, as the lingua franca for Malaysian schools. The language, with its intricate series of tongue clicks and nasal noises, is the main language in the South and Central African pre-modern tribes, collectively also known as the ‘San’ people.

READ MORE.....

Monday, February 23, 2009

Challenges of a class teacher

TEACHER TALK WITH MALIKA VASUGI the star 22 Feb 2009
Much of a teacher’s time, energy and emotions go into the seemingly mundane job of managing a class.

I HAVE always thought that the most significant but understated portfolio among school staff is that of the class teacher. But then, of course every one who holds any portfolio in school tends to think that his/hers is the most important task, with the most responsibility, and that others with different duties have it good compared to them.

The head of discipline thinks that he is chiefly accountable for students’ good behaviour and rule-keeping and subsequently, the school environment.

The co-curriculum co-ordinator thinks he is the one responsible for how the various teams representing the school perform at inter-school competitions, which would, in turn, have a bearing on its image.

The subject heads think that since, after all, it is examination results that are the real determinant of school status, they therefore have the heaviest burden of ensuring that the academic performance of students is continuously improving.

And the administrative people think that they have the toughest job of all, which is to ensure that teachers toe the line at all times. And so it goes, with everyone thinking how much more difficult or trying his/her job is compared to the next person’s.

Onerous responsibility

To an extent, of course, they are all right. Every job assignment in school has its own challenges or inconveniences.

But there are times when one particular duty has more than its fair share of challenges, which is not proportionate to its status or recognition in the implicit ranking order of teachers’ duties.

The class teacher’s job is one example of this. After all, almost every teacher is a class teacher, so what can be so special about it, they reckon, forgetting just how much of their time, energy and emotions go into this seemingly mundane job every school day.

And so teachers often place other “more” special-sounding duties above this and add Form/Class Teacher as an afterthought, or if there is some remaining space in the form they are supposed to fill.

It is a little strange that the most important roles we play in our lives are also the ones we least recognise as being important. The class teacher, on the day of her appointment, becomes responsible for the students under her charge.

And for the entire school term she is like a proxy-mother who is responsible not only for whatever is going on with the students in her class but also the physical features of the classroom itself — from broken window panes to the scrunched up balls of paper beneath students’ desks.

But there is discrimination even with the delegation of class teacher duties.

Preferential treatment

“Cronyism and preferential treatment reign supreme in the allocation of teachers’ annual duties,” or so, my friend Dilla said, with a knowing look.

“How else do you account for the same teachers always getting the ‘best’ classes and some others, the end ones? “Although,” she added, “it could be that some teachers have a particular... er ... affinity, for being at the lowest end of most things. By the way, isn’t this the third year in a row that you’ve been assigned an end-class?”

It was the second class from the end, I coldly informed Dilla. But yes, in the past few years, I seem to have been on an end-class streak.

And yes, it does require a certain skill to be able to handle students from the end-classes, especially if you are the form teacher of one.

Over the years, I have gotten wise to a few things about end-classes and I keep them constantly in mind.

First, there are actually two categories of end-classes in the average Malaysian school. If you have the double misfortune of being assigned an end-class which is not only academically slow but filled with students who are on the discipline master’s due-for-suspension list, then you have to be extra vigilant.

Get a whole bunch of surat amaran and carbon paper in your file because chances are that a major chunk of your time will be occupied with dispensing letters for non-attendance or misconduct.

If a particular student in your class has been absent for a while and his friend tells you that he is visiting his ailing grandmother, check it out.

For all you know, the hale and hearty grandmother may be busy discussing the finer points of mahjong with her buddies, while her errant grandson has decided to extend his Chinese New Year holidays by a couple of weeks.

When it comes to the teaching and learning of your subject, you have to remember who your students are. If they were able to write 350-word compositions independently or solve trigonometric problems easily, would they be in your class in the first place?

Providing guidance

You have to give them stuff that they can handle and probably a lot of props and guidance along the way.

Again, all this is nothing new to most of you, but you sometimes wonder why the targeted examination results of classes like these, as stipulated by the administrators, remain ridiculously unrealistic.

If your end-class comprises students who are only weak academically but are otherwise pretty well-behaved and eager-to-please, then you are in luck.

With these students, however, you have to be extremely specific in your instructions, which is something many end-class “specialists” like you already know.

For instance, if your school is organising another round of those gotong-royong activities because some big shot from the state education department is due to visit, it is not enough for you to tell them to be prepared with the necessary paraphernalia – you know, old rags, dusters and such.

You’ve got to provide the tools for the job and then instruct them on how to do it, step by step. It’s a bit like being a site supervisor. For starters, perhaps you’ve got to go through the old drawers in your kitchen and pull out an assortment of what qualifies as cleaning rags and dusters.

Also, try to locate those old calendar pictures you wanted to get rid off but didn’t have the heart to. Provided they don’t cause the Censorship Board to descend upon your school, you can use them to cover up strategic spots in your classroom. Like the left corner at the back, where the previous class had recorded with permanent ink the physical attributes of particular teachers in the school.

Remember that gaudy, mismatched floral arrangement your elderly aunt gave you for Christmas five years ago and which you only displayed whenever she came to visit?

Well, now you can tell her that her present was so beautiful you decided to display it prominently on the teacher’s table in your classroom.

Come to think of it, perhaps being assigned an end-class isn’t such a bad thing after all.

And when you hear the form teacher of the first class complaining loudly about how her students are too occupied with studying and homework to see to classroom “beautification”, you can have a little chuckle and think about Datuk Shahrukh Khan and Jackie Chan spewing motivational words in Bahasa Malaysia on your classroom walls.

And keep your fingers crossed. Who knows, your class may even clinch the keceriaan award one of these days.