Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, August 14, 2017

Philippines: Duterte’s illiberal democracy

Duterte’s rapprochement with China has been read as a reaction to Western criticism of the violent drug crackdown, although his anti-US nationalism has deeper roots in the legacies of colonialism and can be linked to an attempt to equibalance foreign policy between the United States, China and other regional powers — particularly Japan but also Russia and India. But the impetus for the change was clearly Duterte’s illiberal realignment.

by Mark R. Thompson-
( August 14, 2017, Hong Kong SAR, Sri Lanka Guardian) After just one year in office, President Rodrigo Duterte has established an illiberal democracy in the Philippines.
Because Duterte was elected in May 2016 in free and fair elections with media freedoms still in place, his regime differs from others in the region such as those of Malaysia and Singapore in which regimes play the electoral game while systematically violating principles of fairness. Deploying a populist ‘order above law’narrative during his presidential campaign, any remaining institutional barriers to this illiberalism were quickly sidelined through mass defections in Congress and the timidity of the Supreme Court.
In his recent State of the Union address Duterte gave further indications of his growing authoritarianism. He accused major online newspaper Rappler — known for giving space to opposition views — of being foreign owned, which is illegal in the Philippines. Rappler has vigorously denied the charge. Duterte has also threatened to abolish the constitutionally mandated Commission on Human Rights for criticising his violent drug crackdown and has warned the Ombudsmen not to investigate police or military involvment without seeking his permission first.
Duterte first constructed this strongman political model at the local level as Mayor of Davao before ‘nationalising’ it as president. The drug war allowed Duterte to quickly erect an illiberal democracy in which he took advantage of the systemic crisis of a once dominant liberal reformist order. Despite the personal popularity of his predecessor Benigno Aquino III, the liberal order’s ‘good governance’ narrative had been undermined by a pork barrel scandal. Key elite groups backing it were discredited (particularly the Catholic Church through a series of scandals) and institutions remained weak (particularly a broken criminal justice system). Walden Bello points out that Duterte has not ‘feared to transgress liberal discourse [which] not only does … not trouble a significant part of the population, they’ve even clapped for it’.
The drug war has resulted in thousands of deaths, with one estimate as high as 9000. The Philippine Commission on Human Rights charged that the anti-drug campaign has involved ‘summary executions, corruption, and abuse of power’. An Amnesty International investigation claimed the drug war has created ‘an economy of murder’ with hundreds of US dollars paid for each extrajudicial killing. The most recent high profile killing — the result of a controversial police operation — was that of Ozamiz City mayor Reynaldo Parojinog, who Duterte had tagged as a narco-politician. But most ‘hits’ have been on poor and defenceless people — mainly users not big time dealers — making the war against drugs appear more like a war against the poor.
Before being forced to apologise, the Philippine president once even compared his violent campaign with Hitler’s Holocaust, saying he would gladly murder the country’s three million drug dealers and users. This showed Duterte to be a poor political mathematician. A 2015 survey by the president’s Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) revealed the Philippines has little more than half the number of drug users Duterte asserted: 1.8 million, with only a third taking illegal substances in the past year. Duterte fired the DDB head for sticking with these official figures.
Given Duterte supporters’ efforts to defend his record through the old political ruse of the ‘principle of deniability’, it is difficult to tie Duterte to particular deaths during the anti-drug campaign. The deniability argument is particularly widespread in the political class dominated by lawyers, since Duterte is an experienced former prosecutor. But such a strategy is unsustainable given Duterte’s repeated threats to kill drug dealers and users, telling Filipinos to ‘forget the laws on human rights’. John Collins has predicted that based on evidence from similar coercive anti-drug efforts around the world ‘the Philippines’ new “war” will fail and society will emerge worse off from it’.
As the first Philippine president from Mindanao, it is ironic that Duterte has faced his biggest security challenge from within his own region. As of July 2017, over 500 people have been killed (including civilians) and tens of thousands displaced since the Maute group, which claims Islamic State connections, seized large parts of Marawi city in late May. Distracted by the drug war, earlier chances to target the group were missed. Duterte’s declaration of, and now his request to extend, martial law in Mindanao is seen by critics as a first step toward declaring martial rule nationwide.
Upon taking office, the Duterte administration entered into peace talks with the Communists who have been waging an insurgency for the last half century. Duterte appointed three of their allies to his Cabinet and was also seen to have a warm relationship with the head of the Communists, Jose Maria Sison, who was Duterte’s former professor. But angered by several ambushes of government troops despite a ceasefire, Duterte broke off the talks. He and Sison have now entered into a war of words, with the latter calling Duterte the country’s ‘number one drug addict’ for his use of the opioid Fentanyl.
Duterte’s rapprochement with China has been read as a reaction to Western criticism of the violent drug crackdown, although his anti-US nationalism has deeper roots in the legacies of colonialism and can be linked to an attempt to equibalance foreign policy between the United States, China and other regional powers — particularly Japan but also Russia and India. But the impetus for the change was clearly Duterte’s illiberal realignment.
Although a nascent opposition to Duterte — led by Senator Leila de Lima, jailed on flimsy drug charges, and Vice President Maria Leonor ‘Leni’ Robredo — has emerged, it remains largely powerless and much mocked on social media. The social media landscape has become saturated with ‘Dutertards’ — fanatical Duterte supporters, some of whom have now been appointed to government positions.
Criticised by the former Obama administration for human rights violations during the drug war, Duterte seems to have found a new political friend in US President Donald Trump, who has praised the crackdown. Still popular at home and finding new allies abroad, Duterte promises national salvation by claiming that only violent strongman rule can bring political order to the country.
Mark R. Thompson is a Professor of politics and Head of the Department of Asian and International Studies at the City University of Hong Kong, where he is also Director of the Southeast Asia Research Centre. Article first appeared in East Asia Forum 
Journalist mysteriously vanishes after boarding submarine. Sub’s designer is arrested after it sinks.

Swedish journalist Kim Wall disappeared while profiling Danish inventor Peter Madsen on his submarine. Madsen was arrested and charged with manslaughter after the vessel sank.(Amber Ferguson/The Washington Post)

 
Swedish journalist Kim Wall disappeared while profiling Danish inventor Peter Madsen on his submarine. Madsen was arrested and charged with manslaughter after the vessel sank.(Amber Ferguson/The Washington Post)

Kim Wall has reported from the heart of postwar Sri Lanka and from the capital of North Korea. While covering climate change in the Marshall Islands, she was quarantined and tested for exposure to radiation.

The 30-year-old freelance journalist, based in New York and China, is known among her friends as an intrepid reporter, skilled at exploring hard-hitting topics in obscure and at times dangerous locations.
So to her loved ones, a reporting trip off the coast of Denmark appeared to be a relatively safe destination. It was, after all, less than 30 miles from her Swedish home town and in a country that ranks among the world’s safest.

But it was on this trip, aboard a submarine, that Wall vanished late last week.

She was last seen Thursday, departing from Copenhagen on the vessel, along with its owner,  Danish inventor and amateur rocket builder Peter Madsen, 46. According to her family, Wall was working on a story about Madsen, who is well known in Denmark for using crowdfunding to build his own submarines and rockets.

Copenhagen police have arrested Madsen and detained him on a charge of involuntary manslaughter, although no body has been found, according to a police news release. As the search for Wall continues, police also said they would like to talk with anyone who may have seen her leave the submarine.

Police say Madsen deliberately sank the submarine Friday, and then was plucked from Koge Bay. Officials lifted the vessel out of the bay, where it had sunk in more than 22 feet of water.

“The sub has been searched and there is nobody on board — neither dead nor alive,” Copenhagen police homicide chief Jens Moller told reporters at a news conference, according to Reuters and other news outlets.

Madsen has denied the charge, saying he dropped Wall off in the harbor of Copenhagen late Thursday after she completed her reporting. Madsen has since changed his story, police said Sunday, but declined to explain further.

Madsen’s lawyer, Bettina Hald Engmark, told the Associated Press that her client is “willing to cooperate.” After a two-hour private hearing Saturday, a judge ordered that Madsen be held for 24 days while police continue investigating. He has not contested his detention.


Peter Madsen, right, talks to a police officer in Dragoer Harbor south of Copenhagen on Aug. 11 after the submarine sank. (Bax Lindhardt/Scanpix Denmark/AFP/Getty Images)

Police had been searching for the submarine, named the UC3 Nautilus, since Friday morning, when Wall’s boyfriend reported that she had not returned to Copenhagen on Thursday night as planned.
Krisitan Isbak told a Danish news outlet that he spotted the submarine, and Madsen in the vessel’s tower, after authorities asked for help in the search. He saw Madsen go down into the submarine and reemerge shortly after. Then the vessel began to sink, he said.

“There was no panic at all,” Isbak said. “The man was absolutely calm.”

Isbak described the scene further to the AP, saying, “there was then some kind of airflow coming up and the submarine started to sink.” Madsen stayed in the tower until water began pouring into it. As the boat sank, he swam to a nearby boat, Isbak told the AP.

Madsen spoke to Danish television station TV2, claiming the submarine sank after “a minor problem with a ballast tank,” which holds water to provide stability, “turned into a major issue.

“It took about 30 seconds for Nautilus to sink, and I couldn’t close any hatches or anything,” Madsen told the station. “But I guess that was pretty good because I otherwise still would have been down there.”

The UC3 Nautilus is described on its website as “one of the world’s largest home-built submarines” and launched in May 2008 in Copenhagen’s harbor. In 2014, Madsen began a new endeavor, a space laboratory that relies on donations. It aims to be the first nongovernmental, fully volunteer-driven organization to launch a human into space, according to the BBC.


This photo purportedly shows Swedish journalist Kim Wall standing in the tower of the private submarine “UC3 Nautilus” in Copenhagen Harbor. (Anders Valdsted/AFP/Getty Images)

Wall’s family declined to speak in detail about her disappearance. But her mother told The Washington Post, “we still hope for her safe return.”

“It is with a great concern that we, her family, received the news that Kim is missing after an interview with Peter Madsen in Denmark,” the family wrote in a statement to the Committee to Protect Journalists. “We sincerely hope that she will be found and that she is well.”

Wall’s disappearance resonated among journalists around the world, with many of them sharing the news across social media over the weekend. Her reporting covered topics such as identity, gender, pop-culture, social justice and foreign policy, and her work has appeared in Harpers, the Guardian, the New York Times, Foreign Policy, the Atlantic and many other publications.

A native of Malmö, Sweden, Wall graduated from Columbia University with master’s degrees in journalism and international affairs. She received a bachelor’s degree from the London School of Economics & Political Science.

The International Women’s Media Foundation described her as a “beloved member” of its community and said it was “enormously concerned” about her disappearance.

“We ask that the Danish authorities urgently make every effort to locate Kim and provide everyone who loves her with more information,” the organization wrote in a statement. “The global press freedom community is united in standing with Kim, her family and colleagues.”

The Committee to Protect Journalists echoed these demands, calling for an exhaustive inquiry into Wall’s “fate and whereabouts.”

“Denmark should not be considered a dangerous assignment for journalists,” wrote Nina Ognianova, the group’s Europe and Central Asia program coordinator.

Christopher Harress‏, a reporter for AL.com based in Alabama, told The Washington Post he became good friends with Wall while attending Columbia University with her. She was in all of his classes, he said.

After she graduated in 2013, Wall’s peers admired her decision to pursue a career as an independent journalist, move to China and chase stories around the world. She often relied on grants to fund her reporting trips.

“She did it all,” Harress said. “She’d been to all these different dangerous places.”

So when Harress and Wall’s other classmates heard Wall was missing, they initially presumed she may have simply wandered to pursue a story on an island.

“Because it is such a safe country, we just thought off course she’s gone somewhere,” Harress said. “We just thought that was her, that was what she did. She just wandered places.”

But as the news reports took a more ominous turn, her friends became increasingly worried.
“I think we just fear the worst now,” Harress said. “She trusted somebody and then this is what happened.”

He said her disappearance has “shaken up” many of Wall’s friends and fellow journalists, and has “tested a lot of our perceptions of what can happen to someone in certain places.”

“You can go to Africa and be perfectly safe and then go to one of the safest places in Europe,” and this happens, he said.


Cleve R. Wootson Jr. contributed to this post, which has been updated. 

Trump calls KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists 'repugnant'


CNN Digital Expansion 2017

Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump, facing mounting pressure from Republicans and Democrats alike, did what he declined to do over the weekend during an event at the White House on Monday when he directly condemned white supremacists and neo-Nazis in a brief statement to reporters.

"Racism is evil -- and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans," Trump said in response to the attacks in Charlottesville, Virginia, over the weekend.

"Those who spread violence in the name of bigotry strike at the very core of America," Trump said.
The comments came in a hastily scheduled White House event in the Diplomatic Reception Room, where Trump -- speaking with the help of a teleprompter -- spoke straight to camera after meeting with FBI Director Christopher Wray and Attorney General Jeff Sessions to discuss the Department of Justice's civil rights investigation into the attack.

"To anyone who acted criminally in this weekend's racist violence, you will be held fully accountable," he said. "Justice will be delivered.​"

Trump had been excoriated for his unwillingness to condemn the groups behind the violent protests that left one woman dead who was hit by a car allegedly driven by a man with ties to white supremacy groups.

After blaming the violence "on many sides" Saturday, Trump stayed silent for close to 48 hours, letting his trademark bluntness and campaign pledges to call terrorism what it is succumb to silence and vagueness.

Trump was asked by reporters after he spoke why he waited so long to condemn these hate groups by name and did not respond.

Trump added that the victims in Charlottesville "embody the goodness and decency of our nation." The President said the death of Heather Heyer, a 32-year-old woman who was killed Saturday when a car slammed into a crowd of counterprotesters, "fills us with grief." And said the two officers killed in a helicopter crash on Saturday -- pilot Lt. H. Jay Cullen and Trooper Berke M.M. Bates -- "exemplify the very best of America."
"In times such as these, America has always shown its true character -- responding to hate with love, division with unity, and violence with an unwavering resolve for justice," Trump said.

Trump's comments came as he took a short break from his 17-day long working vacation in New York and New Jersey with a trip to the White House. He initially returned to Washington to meet with top administration officials and sign a presidential memorandum directing his US trade representative to determine whether an investigation is needed into China's laws and policies related to trade and intellectual property.

But by Monday morning, after nearly 48 hours of pressure on the White House, Trump and his top aides seemingly realized that pressure was too great and that a statement needed to be delivered.

"As a candidate I promised to restore law and order to our country, and our federal law enforcement agencies are following through on that pledge," Trump said. "We will spare no resource in fighting so that every American child can grow up free from violence and fear. We will defend and protect the sacred rights of all Americans and we will work together so that every citizen in this blessed land is free to follow their dreams, in their hearts, and to express the love and joy in our souls."

Trump led his brief statement by touting his return to Washington and positive economic news. One aide said the President wanted to give the "full picture" of how he sees things -- not only wanting to do Charlottesville in a vacuum. And said the President's initial focus on economic news was not ad-libbed.

Later on Monday, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told CNN that Trump has no plans to visit Charlottesville.

This was the White House's latest attempt to clarify Trump's comments from Saturday, and by far the most forceful.

An unnamed White House official said Sunday that "of course" the President condemns "white supremacists, KKK, neo-Nazi and all extremist groups," but declined to explain why the President wasn't saying it himself.
Before Trump made a statement, Vice President Mike Pence delivered a "no tolerance" message during a brief discussion with reporters in Cartagena, Colombia.

"We have no tolerance for hate and violence from white supremacists, neo-Nazis or the KKK," said Pence, calling them "dangerous fringe groups."

Trump remained silent even after Pence's comment, remaining silent event on Twitter. By declining to send a single tweet of his own, Sunday was only the fourth in his 207 days as president that Trump has gone a full day without tweeting a message.

Trump did, however, use Twitter on Monday to push his political message and settle a score: He slammed Ken Frazier, the CEO of Merck Pharma, who resigned from Trump's manufacturing council over his failure to condemn white supremacists.

"Now that Ken Frazier of Merck Pharma has resigned from President's Manufacturing Council, he will have more time to LOWER RIPOFF DRUG PRICES," Trump tweeted.
Frazier, one of the nation's top African-American CEOs, has spent considerable time at the White House with Trump before he resigned his position.

Macron’s Revolution Is Over Before It Started 

The French president's movement of upper-middle-class amateurs is having trouble reviving national politics.
Macron’s Revolution Is Over Before It Started


No automatic alt text available.BY ROBERT ZARETSKY-AUGUST 14, 2017

On May 7, French voters chose Emmanuel Macron as their new president. His victory — soon followed by the legislative victory of his newly created “Republic on the Move” party, En Marche — seemed to promise a renewal, perhaps even a revolution of French politics, society, and economy. This, at least, was the message of Macron’s campaign book, aptly titled “Révolution,” in which he chided the French for “wanting change, without truly wanting it.”

One hundred days later, the bloom is off the revolutionary rose. In fact, the polls reveal the petals are already falling. In July, according to the Institut français de l’opinion publiqe (IFOP), Macron’s approval rating shed 10 percentage points, falling from 64 percent to 54 percent. A more recent YouGov poll registers an even greater decline, from 43 percent to 36 percent. While every presidential honeymoon ends sooner or later, Macron’s has ended sooner and with greater thud than most. As Jérôme Fourquet, the director of IFOP, notes, Macron’s descent in the polls — the most dramatic in more than 20 years — is “unusual.” There is, he remarked, a growing “sentiment of suspicion” concerning the true nature of Macron’s promised revolution. And rightfully so.

The source of Macron’s vaunted “democratic revolution” was civil society. The French, he declared, were fed up with the traditional parties on the left and right. Like his nemeses on the hard left and right, Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Marine Le Pen, Macron offered a kind of “dégagisme” — tossing out the bums. In his book, he blasted “the same faces and same men” who continued to apply “recipes from the previous century” to meet this century’s great challenges. By voting for his newly formed party, the voters would send professional politicians packing, their place taken by amateurs who represented the best and brightest of civil society.

But since they took office, the Macronistas have aroused deepening doubts about the virtues of amateurism claimed on their behalf — and Macron’s own. During the short summer parliamentary session, stretching from June 27 to August 9, En Marche deputies made the headlines less for their accomplishments than their couacs, or missteps. Rapped on the knuckles for applauding too faintly during Macron’s opening address at Versailles, they applauded too frantically when Prime Minister Édouard Philippe spoke the following day. (Philippe was interrupted by clapping 55 times, once after citing the high failure rate of university students.) Some members arrived too late to cast votes, others arrived in time to (mistakenly) vote against their party’s own proposals. When their parliamentary leader, François de Rugy, was not busy dissing his own deputies, he was dissing a Communist member of parliament as chiant, or pain in the ass. (Rugy was the victim of a microphone he thought was off.) Contemplating this sorry cascade of smash-ups, the government’s spokesman, Christophe Castaner, sighed that the deputies at least now “have the summer to hit the books.”

Of course, Castaner also pointed to his party’s legislative successes. The controversial revision of the Labor Code was launched — a project that risks, come September, crashing into the reefs of worker unrest and street protests. There was, as well, a much-heralded revision of political mores. Despite its oddly puritanical phrasing — the “law for the moralization of political life” — its substance is rather modest. Most notably, the legislation forbids senators and National Assembly representatives from hiring family members to staff positions — a nod to last winter’s revelation that ex-prime minister and ex-presidential candidate François Fillon had, for several years, paid his wife a lavish salary for opening his mail. (Less remarked, though, was the legislation’s failure to prevent elected officials from working as corporate consultants while also serving, at least in principle, the commonweal.)

The rookie mistakes committed by the Macronistas slowed the party’s legislative agenda but did not sabotage it. But beyond the procedural problems involved in Macron’s vaunted “return to civil society” reside a couple of larger, and more troubling, truths about the new political dispensation in France. In a recent study, political scientist Luc Rouban carefully dissected the composition of the En Marche deputies. Befitting rookies, they represent a significant generational change; averaging 46 years of age, the Macronistas are dramatically younger than the representatives from the traditional parties. (The average age of Socialist deputies is nearly 55, topping by two years those from the centrist Democratic Movement and far-right National Front.)

As for the percentage of rookies, Rouban notes that they “constitute the heart of this renewal.” Slightly more than half of En Marche deputies has never served — a striking contrast to Socialists, where only 7 percent are newcomers, and the conservative Republicans, where they count less than 2 percent. Equally striking are the gender differences: Women fill nearly 47 percent of the En Marche deputies are women, while slightly less than 40 percent of Socialist deputies and 23 percent of Republican and Frontist deputies are women.

But the most dramatic difference lies elsewhere. Like a seismograph, the legislative elections registered what has been a slow, but seismic shift among the nation’s socioeconomic classes. Since the 1980s, members of France’s middle class, many of whom had worked in the public sector, had dominated parliament. But an overwhelming majority of En Marche deputies — slightly more than 70 percent — issue from the rarefied ranks of the upper-middle class. Tellingly, while state employees still dominate the traditional parties, they barely sprinkle the En Marche ranks, whose résumés bristle with master’s degrees and startup experiences.

In effect, the En Marche-dominated National Assembly represents a particularly insidious form of what Rouban calls “democracy without the people.” One bitter irony is that the traditional parties had been organizations that themselves served as socioeconomic elevators for working-class and lower-middle-class men and women. Among En Marche deputies, however, the elevator is mostly empty: Fewer than 10 percent have working-class backgrounds.

Not surprisingly, the En Marche legislative agenda reflects its members’ professional socioeconomic backgrounds. Just as the revision of the Labor Code seeks to give employers greater leeway in hiring and firing workers, the promised tax reforms seek to lessen the fiscal burden on their businesses. Moreover, the vast amounts Macron seeks to invest in the French economy — 50 billion euros over five years — with particular attention paid to innovative industries, mirror the worldview of the REM rank and file. “I am only passing through,” observed one En Marche MP, Sylvain Mallard, about his new job as parliamentary deputy. “I was an entrepreneur before, and I’ll be an entrepreneur after.”

Compounding these ironies is the widespread misconception that “the people” fueled the rise of En Marche. As Rouban’s analysis reveals, Macron’s promised revolution, it turns out, is also missing the people. In the second round of the presidential election, nearly half of those who voted for Macron — 43 percent according to an Ipsos poll — did so because his competitor, Marine Le Pen, terrified them. Moreover, a significant number of eligible voters did not bother to vote: Roughly 25 percent of the electorate stayed home — the highest level of abstentions since 1969 — while another 10 percent made the trip in order to register a blank ballot. The results of the legislative election revealed a similar ambivalence. Not only did the predicted “tidal wave” of 440 to 470 National Assembly seats never materialize — En Marche ultimately won 308 seats — but the abstention rate hit a record 57 percent. The voters who did make it to the polls did not live in the post-industrial wastelands, but instead were professionals from large cities.

Slightly more than a century ago, the Franco-Italian sociologist Vilfredo Pareto offered an important insight that casts light on the REM phenomenon. In essence, Pareto argued that elites always rule, but that they also change. Or, more precisely, elites always circulate; when one elite begins to wane, another starts to wax. The true tension is not between different social classes, but instead between groups within the same social classes. In the case of the French ruling class, the fonctionnaires who identified with French statism are now giving way to entrepreneurs who are inspired by liberalism of a Silicon Valley variety.

But it was a full-blooded Italian from the early 20th century, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, who best captured the phenomenon that is Macron’s self-described revolution. In his celebrated novel The Leopard, Lampedusa tells the story of a Sicilian aristocrat, Don Fabrizio, who confronts an earlier kind of revolution — the unification of Italy, or Risorgimento — which threatens to turn his world upside down. But as his nephew Tancredi explains, this will not be the case if they make room at the top for those leading the revolution. In the end, his words to Don Fabrizio mirror the En Marche worldview: If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.

Photo credit: Leon Neal/Getty Images
Rapists marrying their victims is becoming an accepted practice in Malaysia

shutterstock_517770577-940x580

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Two years ago, Riduan Masmud was charged of raping a 12 year old girl and to avoid prosecution, he took her as his wife. Image depicts a traditional Malay wedding ceremony. Source: Shutterstock

RAPISTS marrying their victims now seems to be an acceptable cultural practice in Malaysia.

Two years ago, Riduan Masmud was charged of raping a 12 year old girl and to avoid prosecution, he took her as his wife. Utterly ridiculous.

Riduan was eventually convicted and jailed for actually trying to bribe the girls father with RM10,000 (US$2330). At the time of the crime, which was in 2013, he was married with four children. The victim became his second wife.

Last week, Rohani Abdul Karim, Malaysia’s Minister for Women, Family and Community Development, said that the now 16-year-old victim is healthy and doing fine while her rapist husband is serving his time in jail. In fact, she even paid him a visit once.


Nevermind that the girl hasn’t been to school since the incident because she feels too ashamed of what had happened. Nevermind that she says she intends to work to support herself although without finishing school, that opportunity will be bleak.

Nevermind all that because the minister who is supposed to be in charge and responsible of protecting the interests of women and families in Malaysia has said that she is doing fine and healthy. Utterly ridiculous.

I think Malaysians really need to reflect and think about what is right and wrong when it comes to rape. The fact that a rape victim can ‘take responsibility’ for his actions by marrying his victim is clearly wrong, and worst is that it is so entrenched in the Malaysian system.

And you know something is so entrenched in our society when it enters into our popular culture. In the last month, I have watched no less than three mainstream Malaysian movies in the cinema that treated rape very disturbingly.

The three movies are Kau Yang SatuMinah Moto and Pencuri Hati Mr Cinderella. The first was di]s were all written and directed by men.

Kau Yang Satu tells of a couple who were married through the arrangement of their fathers. One particular scene shows the husband raping the wife in order to ‘teach her a lesson’. She gets upset but eventually forgives him because he charms her by teaching her how to tie a neck tie!

Minah Moto is a story about a group of women who likes to race motorcycles and one of them gets involved with male racers. She eventually gets raped but the scene is presented so comically and with such disrespect that you wonder what the director, Ahmad Idham, thinks of rape.


The Fat Bidin Film Club (Ep 104) - Minah Moto
Now the same director, in the film Pencuri Hati Mr Cinderalla, tells a story of a 45-year-old man who falls in love with a girl 20 years younger than him. She gets raped by his best friend’s son and they all converge in the best friend’s house to confront the son.

The sons apologises to him and to his father without ever acknowledging the girl he raped, who is sitting right next to him, and says that he will do the honourable thing and marry her. He said that he made this decision because his father had raised him to be a responsible person.


Several months ago in April, Shabudin Yahaya, a Malaysian member of Parliament from the northern state of Penang, made a statement in Parliament that there is nothing wrong for a rapist to marry his victim because girls as young as nine years old were ready for marriage.

He even said that some young girls can appear physically older than their age. He elaborated that “some children aged 12 or 15, their bodies are like 18-year-old women”. I am going to say it again: utterly ridiculous.

Where is this thinking coming from? This is a very worrying culture that is developing in Malaysia and I hope that our society starts to realise it. But it sure doesn’t look that way. With all that is going on, I am at a lost for words if people were to ask for a solution to the problem.

** This is the personal opinion of the writer and does not reflect the views of Asian Correspondent

Sierra Leone landslide: More than 300 killed as roads turn into 'churning rivers of mud'


The TelegraphBt 14 AUGUST 2017

More than 300 people have been killed after a mudslide and heavy flooding in Sierra Leone.

Relatives were left digging through mud in search of their loved-ones, as a mortuary in the capital of Freetown was overwhelmed by bodies.
Houses were submerged in mud after a night of heavy rain that saw a hillside in the Regent area collapse, with roads described by witnesses as being turned into "churning rivers of mud".

A coroner's official said that more than 200 bodies had been taken to the city mortuary, which was left struggling to cope. The Red Cross said the death toll had risen to 312.
However, a precise death toll is not yet clear and is likely to rise as many people might have been asleep when the mudslide happened in the early hours of Monday.
An estimated 2,000 people have also been made homeless after heavy rains caused properties to disappear under water.

Houses were left submerged in mud after a night of heavy rain that reportedly saw a hillside in the Regent area collapse

Houses were left submerged in mud after a night of heavy rain that saw a hillside in the Regent area collapse CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE
Speaking at the scene, Sierra Leone's Vice President, Victor Foh, said: "It is likely that hundreds are lying dead underneath the rubble."
He added: "The disaster is so serious that I myself feel broken. We're trying to cordon (off) the area (and) evacuate the people."
People cried as they looked at the damage under steady rain, gesturing towards a muddy hillside where dozens of houses used to stand.

flooded streets in Regent
Cars submerged in muddy water in streets in Regent CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE/AFP
Sinneh Kamara, a coroner technician at the Connaught Hospital, told local media that the number of those killed had overwhelmed the facility.
"The capacity at the mortuary is too small for the corpses," he told the Sierra Leone National Broadcasting Corporation.

Youngsters flee flooded homes in Regent, near Freetown
Youngsters flee flooded homes in Regent, near Freetown CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE/AFP
Sierra Leone's national television broadcaster interrupted its regular programming to show scenes of people trying to retrieve the bodies of loved-ones. Others were seen carrying relatives' remains in rice sacks to the mortuary.
Military personnel have been deployed to help in the rescue operation in the West African country.

Mudslide
Flowing water floods the streets in an area on the outskirts of Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE
Fatmata Sesay - who lives on the hilltop area of Juba - said she, her three children and husband were woken at 4.30am by rain beating down on their mud house, which was by then submerged by water. She managed to escape by climbing onto the roof.
"We have lost everything and we do not have a place to sleep," she told AFP.

Villagers look on in this image that reportedly shows the aftermath of the Sierra Leone mudslide
Villagers look on in this image that shows the aftermath of the Sierra Leone mudslide CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE
Images shared by local media showed people waist-deep trying to navigate streets of flowing water.

Mudslide
Locals carry belongings after the mudslide early on Monday in this picture said to show the scene near Freetown CREDIT: SOCIETY FOR CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION SIERRA LEONE
Other pictures showed scenes after a section of a hill in the Regent area was reported to have collapsed.

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