Looking for Superbike?

Uncle is a superbike enthusiast, having bought 2 superbikes previously for the last 10 years. And he got them directly from Japan.

The Honda CBR954 is to be the last after continuous nagging from the wife to settle with something less fast, and more than 2 wheels, prompted the Uncle to attempt to sell off his superbike. :P Well, age caught up but being as adventurous as he is, he's going after 4WD with turbo engine now.

So therefore, I am helping him to put this online to find prospect buyers. Contact me only if you're a serious buyer. :P

Honda CBR 954 Model

Manufactured: 2003
Registered: Late 2004
1 Owner

Add-ons:
OHLINS dampers
Power commander system
Exhaust AKRAPOVIC Full system

Price: RM62,000 neg.

If you're interested, DM me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/melvincwh or FB message me at http://facebook.com/melvinchanwh.




It's a Shame

Dedicated to my dear Malaysian friends who have to bear the shame caused by some quarters who still believe in "divide and conquer" situations.

Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. (Luke 23:34)

*****
Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) president and state Minister Datuk Seri Dr James Masing said the issue should not have been blown out of proportion.

“Politicians should stay out of this matter and leave it to the religious bodies of the respective religions to sit down and discuss a mutually acceptable way to resolve this,” he said.

Masing said Sarawak and Sabah do not have such controversies because people of all faiths and races were mature enough to accept each others’ beliefs.

Assistant state minister Datuk Daud Abdul Rahman, from the Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu, also stressed the need for common sense to prevail, saying that the state government has always practised tolerance and acceptance when it comes to handling issues of religious and racial nature.

Keadilan Sarawak chairman Baru Bian said the usage of the word Allah became blown out of context in the peninsula because of political meddling.

He said this was a non-issue in Sarawak despite the word being used widely by all religions in the state for so many decades.

******

God bless.

A News Article and A Blog

The article below is copied from the Al-Jazeera site which was blocked by Streamyx on Friday night and Saturday morning. I believe it is fair that what is known to the world should be known by the Malaysians too, to give an opportunity for us to justify or defend the truth or deny rumours of information concerning the beloved country.

Malaysian churches attacked

Protests were held against the overturning of the ban on using the 'Allah' word in Christian literature [AFP]

Four Christian churches in Malaysia have been attacked amid tensions over the use of the word "Allah" by non-Muslims in the country.

Attackers threw a molotov cocktail which failed to ignite at a church in the state of Selangor on Friday afternoon, media reports said.

The incident comes hours after a petrol bomb was thrown at a church in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, as well as attackers trying to set another two ablaze in a nearby suburb.

Police also recieved reports of cars displaying Christian symbols having their windscreens smashed in the suburb of Bangsar.

Hishammuddin Hussein, the home minister, appealed for calm and moved to assure religious groups in the country that "they are safe".

"I take the events that happened last night very seriously," he said.

"We want to assure the public that this was not a co-ordinated and well-planned action."

Ruling suspended

A Malaysian court had last week overturned a government ban on non-Muslims using the word "Allah" in their literature, allowing Roman Catholic newsletter, the Herald, to use the term to refer to God in the Malay language.

The judge has since suspended the implementation of the ruling, after the government appealed and the Roman Catholic church agreed to the suspension.

Police say they have stepped up security at churches following the two attacks [AFP]
Muslim groups held protests after prayers on Friday against the court overturning the "Allah" ban, despite a warning from Musa Hassan, the country's police chief, advising organisers to "let this be handled by the court" and that he "will take action against anyone who acts to jeopardise national security".

Muslims in Malaysia argue that the "Allah" is exclusive to Islam, and its use by Christians would confuse Muslims.

But Catholic church officials say that for Christian indigenous tribes in East Malaysia, who are the main readers of the Herald'sMalay-language edition, "Allah" is the only word they have known for God for decades.

Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett, reporting outside a mosque in the suburb of Kampung Baru, said that protests were held within the mosque compound.

"There was a lively crowd, but not a huge one. Some of the protest organisers filed complaints to local officials over the use of the word Allah in Christian literature," he said.

Government powerless

Najib Abdul Razak, Malaysia's prime minister, earlier said his government was powerless to stop the planned protests as long as protesters did not leave their mosques.

Marina Mahathir, a board member of the Sisters in Islam organisation and the daughter of the former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, told Al Jazeera that many Malaysians are "deeply disappointed as to how this issue has been manipulated".

"This issue goes beyond words and debate. I think many do not understand aspects of this religion, which is why there has been a lot of misinformation going around," she said.

A court ruling last week that the Herald may use the word 'Allah' has been suspended [EPA]
Fire in Friday's first incident gutted the administrative office on the first floor of the three-storey Metro Tabernacle church, shortly after midnight.

Mohamad Sabtu Osman, the Kuala Lumpur police chief, said a witness saw four people on two motorcycles breaking the glass front of the church and throwing an incendiary object inside before fleeing.

Molotov cocktails were believed to be thrown into the compounds of two other churches in Petaling Jaya, just outside Kuala Lumpur, before dawn on Friday.

The attacks on the Assumption church and the Life Chapel caused minor damage, officials said.

Osman said there were no fatalities in the attacks and police were investigating, but added that it was premature to link the attacks on the churches to protests by Muslim groups over last week's court ruling.

Heightened security

Lawrence Andrew, editor of the Herald, said many churches had employed extra security guards amid protest threats as a precaution for fear that matters "may just blow up".

And police say they have stepped up security at churches nationwide following the attacks.

Musa, the police chief, said he had "instructed all patrol cars to patrol all church areas - we are monitoring all churches".

FROM THE BLOGS
Religious tensions rise in 'One Malaysia'
By Teymoor Nabili
Najib, the prime minister, condemned the attacks "because they will destroy our country's harmony".

"The government will take whatever steps it can to prevent such acts," he said.

Salahuddin Ayub, a leader from the Islamic opposition party PAS, also condemned the attack, saying Islam does not allow followers to destroy houses of worship belonging to non-Muslims.

"Even during war, those who seek sanctuary in houses of worship cannot be killed or the buildings itself destroyed," he was quoted as saying by the Malaysian Insider website.

Azmi Sharom, a columnist and law professor at Universiti Malaya, told Al Jazeera that "the unrest is not surprising because of the fact that the government has been pandering to these kinds of people for a long time".

He said the government allowed some groups to protest when others were banned because the main ruling Umno party - which depends on the Malay/Muslim demographic to remain in power - was "unwilling to do anything which would seem to go against what they think is the Malay/Muslim desire".

"This is a noisy demographic and it is potentially dangerous for Umno to alienate them, so this will be a real test for Najib's administration," he said.

Source:Al Jazeera and agencies

By Teymoor Nabili inon January 8th, 2010

Photo by EPA

The row over the use of the word Allah has escalated into violence:

Attackers threw a petrol bomb at church in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, and tried to set two others ablaze in a nearby suburb in the early hours of Friday.

As I write this, Muslim groups are promising to stage protest marches after Friday prayers, and have received the tacit blessing of the prime minister:

He said people could express their views as long as it was done properly and in accordance with regulations.

This last statement has already caused a degree of mirth and anger, and there will doubtless be more.

Certainly the former deputy prime minister and current member of parliament and head of the opposition coalition, Anwar Ibrahim, would be justified in asking why his reform rallies so often seem to be an exception to this ruling; the Hindu organisation Hindraf was told that their desire to deliver a petition to the prime minister of the day fell outside of the right to "express views", and suffered tear gas, water cannon and the arrest of many of its leaders when they tried; and yet Muslim rioters were defended by the home minister during the now infamous "cow's head incident" last year, despite dragging a severed cow head, an animal sacred in Hinduism, which they stomped on and spat atunder the gaze of the riot police.

The prime minster has denied accusations that the move against the Catholic church was politically motivated, but has yet to offer a plausible explanation as to why his government decided to act on the issue in the first place.

Minister in the prime minister's department, Nazri Aziz, has offered this:

We have to take into consideration the culture and nature of Malaysia. What is considered normal in the United States and Europe is not necessarily normal here.

Which fails to explain why what has indeed been normal practice in Malaysia for a very long time is suddenly deemed otherwise, or how allowing it to continue suddenly presents a threat to Muslim sensibilities and social stability.

Since taking office, Prime Minister Najib Razak has been pushing a programme he calls "1Malaysia", on the face of it a recognition of - and an attempt to resolve - the ethnic and religious tensions in the country:

1Malaysia’s goal is to preserve and enhance [the] unity in diversity which has always been our strength and remains our best hope for the future.

But his commitment to the principle has come under severe scrutiny, precisely because of events like this, and the response of government ministers and police when tensions do arise.

The opposition coalition has gone so far as to ask for a Royal Commission on religion, saying:

Malaysians have almost fallen into the boiling pot of discord and tension that was caused by manipulation of religious differences

Or, as veteran DAP politician Lim Kit Siang puts it:

What we have in Malaysia is not 1Malaysia but 2Malaysia – where there is one law for Umno and their supporters and another law for the rest.


Comments are reviewed by Al Jazeera prior to publishing, in accordance with Al Jazeera community rules and may take some time to be posted.


Courtesy of:

http://blogs.aljazeera.net/asia/2010/01/07/religious-tensions-rise-one-malaysia

We Have Wept

When we were just born to the world, we don't get stamped at the head with the phrase "War with Thy Neighbour!" We grew up accepting views from family, friends, politicians, and etc. Subsequently, we started to believe, at some point of time, that all of them were in fact 'the truth'.

Came across the TED video below of a man who went across the 'alleged' conflicts brought by two nations which originally shared the same foundations until the 20th Century's partition, divided by politics. A price laid by the previous generation and paid by the following generation through blood and tears.

An inspiring presentation indeed.


About the talk:
One of a dozen Pakistanis who came to TEDIndia despite security hassles entering the country, TED Fellow Asher Hasan shows photos of ordinary Pakistanis that drive home a profound message for citizens of all nations: look beyond disputes, and see the humanity we share.

Courtesy of TED.com.

Countdown to 2010

I decided that 2009's New Year's Eve to be a random day where anything goes. After traveling from Bukit Bintang's Pavilion for a movie, headed down to Jalan Ipoh and subsequently, to Ampang Jaya for a finale treat (McDonald's sundae dessert, yummy...).

Left Jalan Ipoh at 11.42pm, hoping to catch a glimpse of the fireworks when the clock struck midnight. Drove slowly along Jalan Tun Razak and it was packed with cars parked by the roadside. So for once in the year, I could sidepark on a busy main road and catch the fireworks! And the place was really good to look at the city view as it was also higher too.

When the clock struck midnight, and 1st January 2010 was here, the first glimpse of the fireworks was spotted from the area of Dataran Merdeka (notice right side of the photo, behind the lamp post).

Left shot of Jalan Tun Razak, the place where I side-parked to see fireworks. It was just about 50 metres from the exit to AKLEH expressway. Stood exactly in front of the Celcom building.

Right shot from where I was.

Most beautiful fireworks display actually (from where I was) came from the area in KLCC. The sky was literally showered with lights.

And so, that was some coverage from where I was in the midnight of 31st December 2009 and the morning of 1st January 2010. It was indeed a spectacular year of ups and downs, and seriously I love what had happened throughout the 12 months period. I knew many great friends whom I would've never met if I hadn't chosen to do what I've done then.

Now that 2010 is here. It's time to really create lemonade from lemons I have accumulated till now!

God bless you. Have a wonderful year ahead!
Related Posts with Thumbnails