I want to share and expressed my concern about what was happening around us in Malaysia. Our leaders seemed more preoccupied with positions and perk and keep appointing persons of salvage value which their depreciation rate has indicated that they have no salvage value indeed.
Their thinking on making Malaysia more progressive and forward looking seemed to be directionless.
The role of Islam also looked to be diminished when one read the judgement of Indera Ghandi case. The crime prevention methodology was "zero" by our myopic views on democracy.
We always thought that democracy,human right.International convention will make us the better person. Who design such principle?, we are mere parrots who become the agent for this grand master. In the end we are going to loose what our for forefathers have stood up for us.
Everybody from NGOs, bar councils, writers, poetry are licking us "dry." Whose fault is this. I believed we will be "dead dried."
Crime Cases
I agree if the people said that the crime situation in the country is extremely worrisome. The people, almost without exception, have their own horror stories about armed robberies, car jacking, snatch thefts, attempted abductions and gang violence.
So much so that the streets in our major urban areas are often no-go zones at night. Is this any way to live, when we have to constantly look over our shoulder, be wary if a motorcyclist comes too close to us and where security guards are needed to escorts us to our cars in shopping mall car parks?
We will be angry when the tourists and the people from other countries try to compare Malaysia is worst than Singapore, but it has to be admitted that in the areas of policing, levels of crime, personal safety and border controls, the city-state seems to be doing things right. Businesses and investors are sitting up and taking note of such things.
Yes, Singapore still has the Internal Security Act(ISA). But it has not been used for the preventive detention of criminals. Rather, such elements have been identified and arrested though good investigatory and police techniques and by the rigorous enforcement of laws by an on-the-ball judicial system.
There's much we can learn from this, if we remove the blindfolds from our eyes.
So much so that the streets in our major urban areas are often no-go zones at night. Is this any way to live, when we have to constantly look over our shoulder, be wary if a motorcyclist comes too close to us and where security guards are needed to escorts us to our cars in shopping mall car parks?
We will be angry when the tourists and the people from other countries try to compare Malaysia is worst than Singapore, but it has to be admitted that in the areas of policing, levels of crime, personal safety and border controls, the city-state seems to be doing things right. Businesses and investors are sitting up and taking note of such things.
Yes, Singapore still has the Internal Security Act(ISA). But it has not been used for the preventive detention of criminals. Rather, such elements have been identified and arrested though good investigatory and police techniques and by the rigorous enforcement of laws by an on-the-ball judicial system.
There's much we can learn from this, if we remove the blindfolds from our eyes.
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