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Sunday 1 February 2015

Strong winds, rough seas expected in East Coast, Johor, Sabah, Sarawak

Posted: 1 FEBRUARY 2015 @ 2:42 PM

KUALA LUMPUR: First Category strong winds and rough seas over the waters off Kelantan, Terengganu, Pahang, east Johor, Sarawak, and Sabah (Kudat, Sandakan, West Coast and Interior) are expected to persist till Tuesday.
Similar weather conditions are expected to occur over Samui, Tioman, Bunguran, Reef North, Kuching, Labuan and Sulu.
A Malaysian Meteorological Services Department statement said strong Northeasterly winds of 40 to 50 kmph and waves up to 3.5 metres are also expected to occur over the areas.
“Meanwhile, Second Category strong winds and rough seas over the waters of Condore, Reef North, Layang-layang and Palawan are also expected to persist until Tuesday.
Strong Northeasterly winds of 50 to 60 kmph and waves up to 4.5 metres are dangerous to all shipping and coastal activities including fishing and ferry services, according to the statement.--BERNAMA

Source: http://www.nst.com.my/node/71502
NST - Malaysia

Vicar's 9/11 Facebook post investigated by Church

Posted: 30 January 2015 Last updated at 21:03

The Church of England is investigating a vicar accused of posting an article on Facebook blaming Israel for the 9/11 attacks in the US.
The 9/11 attacks on New York, Washington and Pennsylvania in 2001 claimed nearly 3,000 lives

The Reverend Stephen Sizer, vicar of Christ Church, in Virginia Water, Surrey, allegedly posted a link to an article entitled: "9/11 Israel did it."
He reportedly wrote: "Is this anti-Semitic? It raises so many questions."
Mr Sizer later removed the link and apologised for his "ill-considered and misguided" actions.
The Diocese of Guildford said it was taking "immediate steps" to investigate.
A spokesman for the diocese - which oversees Mr Sizer - said it was a matter of "deep sorrow and shame" that the posts appeared in the same week as the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.
"Our attention has been drawn to comments by the Rev Stephen Sizer on social media.
"In those comments Rev Sizer linked to an article entitled '9/11 Israel did it'," the spokesman said.
'Beyond absurd'
"These comments would rightly be seen as unacceptable whenever they were posted.
"It is a matter of deep sorrow and shame that they have been posted in this week of all weeks."
He added the diocese was "aware of the seriousness of the matter" and was also in touch with the Board of Deputies of British Jews.
In a statement, Mr Sizer said: "It was particularly insensitive in that last week coincided with Holocaust Memorial Day.
"I removed the link as soon as I received adverse feedback, and realised that offence had been caused.
"I have never believed Israel or any other country was complicit in the terrorist atrocity of 9/11, and my sharing of this material was ill-considered and misguided."
He added that at the request of the diocese, he would not be using social media or blogs until further notice.
BBC religious affairs correspondent Caroline Wyatt said Mr Sizer had a history of disputes with Jewish community leaders over blog postings on Israel and Zionism.
In 2013, he and the Board of Deputies of British Jews reached a mediated agreement aimed at ending a long-running dispute over postings on his blog.

Jonathan Arkush, vice-president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews,told the Jewish News: "Posting, and giving approval to, an article which in effect accuses Jews of responsibility for the 9/11 atrocity is unquestionably anti-Semitic, just as it is beyond absurd."
Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-31052648
BBC News

Alibaba's Woes in China Could Spread to the U.S.

Posted: January 30, 2015 
Bruce Einhorn

--Alibaba is bracing for a backlash on all fronts after attacks from the Chinese government and disappointing third-quarter results--

In China, the land of the Great Firewall, local Internet companies are supposed to enjoy a home-field advantage. The Communist Party leadership is notoriously wary about the ability of ordinary Chinese to speak their minds, look at naughty pictures, or engage in other online behavior that makes censors jittery—and foreign-owned companies make officials especially nervous. Google, for instance, won't play by China's censorship rules. Local search giant Baidu, on the other hand, will.

Billionaire Jack Ma, chairman of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg
The Chinese government's interest in promoting local companies is one reason its current battle with Alibaba—China's most powerful Internet business—has given investors such a shock. Accusing Alibaba Group of allowing the sale of frauds and knockoffs on its online marketplace, China's State Administration for Industry and Commerce this week said billionaire Jack Ma's company "faces its biggest credibility crisis since its establishment." In a particularly damaging accusation, given Chinese President Xi Jinping's high-profilecampaign against corruption, the SAIC also accused Alibaba employees of taking bribes.
The company has fired back by filing a complaint against the regulator. Via Alizila (the group's communications arm), Vice Chairman Joe Tsai yesterday assailed what he called "inaccurate & unfair attacks against us."
Adding to Alibaba's woes, the company yesterday announced disappointing third-quarter results, with revenue of 26.2 billion yuan ($4.2 billion). Analysts had been expecting 27.6 billion yuan, according to a survey by Bloomberg. Net profit was 5.98 billion yuan, compared with the 8.8 billion yuan average of analyst estimates.
The fight is all the more surprising because until recently Alibaba's biggest bureaucratic troublemakers were not in Beijing but in Washington, D.C. A few years ago the company's main tormentor was the U.S. Trade Representative, which put Alibaba's Taobao marketplace on its annual "Notorious Markets" list of foreign businesses peddling counterfeits and other products that violate the intellectual property of American companies. In 2011, for instance, the USTR said Taobao had a "long way to go" in cracking down on the easy availability of infringing goods.
Ma was determined to get Taobao off the list. Fighting piracy is “not only for the country, it’s for our company,” Ma said in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek in 2012. “If we do not take down these false products, it’s going to destroy Taobao." It would also make an IPO for Alibaba more challenging.
But at the end of 2012, after Alibaba retained James Mendenhall, a partner in the Washington office of Sidley Austin and former general counsel at George W. Bush's USTR, the U.S. government dropped Alibaba from the list of shame. Last February, the USTR heaped praise on Alibaba, saying the company "has continued working to rid its marketplace of infringing products through the procedures established in 2012."
Now that the Chinese regulator is singing a different tune, though, Alibaba should get ready for some new legal challenges in the U.S. The company's representatives discussed the SAIC's claims in meetings with the agency's Internet regulation director, Liu Hongliang, in July—about two months before its record-breaking New York Stock Exchange debut.
Did Alibaba need to disclose this information before going public? Following the plunge in Alibaba's stock price, which has dropped almost 14 percent since Monday, the class action lawyers are taking aim at the company. Pomerantz, a firm that says it fights "for the rights of the victims of securities fraud, breaches of fiduciary duty, and corporate misconduct," announced yesterday an investigation for Alibaba investors. Rosen Law Firm is investigating allegations the company "may have issued materially misleading information to the investing public," the New York-based firm announced yesterday. The firm "is preparing a class action lawsuit to recover losses suffered by [Alibaba] shareholders."
Several other law firms have said they're investigating, too. Responding to the law firms' announcements, Alibaba said today in a statement to Bloomberg that it is a company "with strong values" that "will vigorously defend the truth and our reputation."
Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-01-30/alibaba-s-woes-in-china-could-spread-to-the-u-s-
bloomberg.com

Native English speakers help teachers and students - Malaysia

Posted: February 1, 2015 MYT 12:00:00 AM

DENGKIL: The 360 native English speakers seconded to schools nationwide have helped to improve English proficiency among teachers and students.
SK Jenderam teacher Fauziatul Durra Ahmad Fauzi said the mentoring sessions with Kathleen Eljeddi had enhanced her confidence and helped create a more engaging environment.
“She provides a helping hand when needed,” she said, adding that Eljeddi was very supportive of her ideas to create a livelier classroom.
“It’s no more chalk and talk,” Fauziatul Durra, 31, said, adding that action songs and multimedia usage were utilised.
Giving a fresh perspective: Eljeddi assisting Year One pupils during their English lesson at SK Jenderam.
Mohamed Suhairie Jamaluddin, 32, said he was apprehensive to speak English initially but now his confidence had grown.
Both the Malaysian teachers noticed a difference in their pupils’ performance as well.
The 40-year-old Eljeddi, an American, said the pupils had also shown more confidence to speak in English.
She said the programme began in SK Jenderam last year and “we try to keep the same teachers so that we can monitor their progress too”.
Second Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh said the 360 mentors, who came from countries such as the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand, were here to coach local teachers nationwide.
Speaking to reporters after visiting the mentors in SK Jenderam here, he said each mentor was assigned to five schools. They would visit one school every weekday.
“They will be covering 1,800 primary schools with 6,500 local English language teachers (to be mentored),” Idris said.
These mentors, he said, would also be sent to urban and rural schools including Chinese and Tamil schools.
Idris said the programme focused on Year One, Year Two and Year Three English Language teachers.
He said the ministry was also carrying out the Professional Up-skilling of English Language Teachers (ProELT) to enhance the proficiency of 22,500 English language teachers by year end.
The ministry, he said, was also running the Fulbright English Teaching Assistants (ETAs) programme where 100 participants would spend 10 months with students in eight states throughout Malaysia.
Besides this, he said the Government would hire retired English teachers, adding that there were now 76 of them working on a contractual basis.
Source: http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2015/02/01/Native-English-speakers-help-teachers-and-students/
The Star - Malaysia

Mixed views on house prices - Malaysia

Posted: February 1, 2015 MYT 12:00:00 AM  BY SHAHANAAZ HABIB
KUALA LUMPUR: There are mixed views on whether the price of houses will go up, come down or remain the same when the Goods and Services Tax (GST) kicks in on April 1.

Customs Department director of GST Datuk Subromaniam Tholasy “presumes house prices may even fall” while Real Estate and Housing Developers Association (Rehda) chairman Datuk Ng Seing Liong believes it will rise.
And IFCA MSC Bhd’s chief financial officer Daniel Chow thinks the GST will be a “non-event” in terms of selling price increase.
Subromaniam said the price of steel was “significantly down” and the price of other raw material were coming down slowly in tandem with falling oil prices.
“If we consider other market conditions, I presume house prices may even fall after taking into account the GST.
“Property developers should pass on cost savings to house buyers,” he said in an interview.
He said land was the “biggest cost component” and there was no GST imposed on residential land.
Residential houses and land are exempt from the GST but construction material such as steel, cement, sand, tiles, etc, are not and would be subject to the 6% GST.
Currently, these construction materials fall under a “First Schedule Goods” and do not incur any Sales and Services Tax (SST).
The GST replaces the SST in April.
Subromaniam agreed that under the GST, the base would be broader with more input such as construction materials being taxed.
Whether this would lead to higher costs, he said, the fact was that many items were already being taxed under the SST, which was a less efficient regime and could actually result in bigger tax costs.
“We have facts to show that the hidden SST is much more than the actual rate,” he added.
Subromaniam said their estimate was that with the GST, the actual increase – if all factors remain the same – would be between 0.5% and 2% maximum.
“It is so minimal if any. Developers should absorb it because their (profit) margin is typically between 20% and 30%,” he said.
Ng, however, said developers would not absorb the extra cost and would pass this on to buyers.
He said based on Rehda’s calculations, the GST would result in a 2.6% increase in house prices.
Calling for major components such as cement, concrete, bricks and sand to be zero rated, he estimated that they made up 44% of the cost of construction.
“If these can be zero-rated, the impact will not be as great,” he said.
He also urged the Government to zero-rate residential houses instead of exempt rate.
(The customer does not pay a GST for zero-rate or GST-exempt products. But the difference is that with zero-rated, the developer gets to claim back the input tax paid to the supplier but with the exempt rate he cannot which results in a higher cost for him.)
IFCA-MSC’s Chow did not foresee any increase in the selling price from April to December because he believed there would be an oversupply of residential properties by the end of the year.
He said many had bought pro­perties two to three years ago paying only the minimum 5% as downpayment under the Deve­­loper-Interest-Bearing-Scheme (which was no longer in effect) with the intention of selling on completion.
“Most are opportunists and property flippers who bought a few units and have no holding power to pay the instalment once the property is completed.
“Those properties will be completed end of 2015 and 2016 and now the buyers are going to have to come up with the money to pay.”
(IFCA-MSC Bhd is one of the dominant software solution providers for the property market.)
Chow estimated the GST tax implication to be 2.1% to 2.2% of the cost of housing which he described as “very minimal”.
“We are talking about a huge pressure due to the oversupply of residential property which will cause property developers to have a big question mark over whether they have the ability to push prices up by even a single per cent.”
Source: http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2015/02/01/Mixed-views-on-house-prices-GST-increase-minimal-and-developers-should-absorb-it-says-Subromaniam/
The Star - Malaysia

Jackie Chan now a Datuk, Datuk Jakie Chan (Malaysia)

Posted: February 1, 2015 MYT 12:00:00 AM BY SIRA HABIBU
PETALING JAYA: International movie star Jackie Chan will be among 356 recipients of awards and medals conferred in conjunction with Federal Territories Day today.
The Hong Kong-born star is among the 71 recipients who would be conferred the Panglima Mahkota Wilayah, carrying the title Datuk.
Honoured: Chan is getting the Panglima Mahkota Wilayah award.

Heading the list of recipients are Attorney General Tan Sri Gani Patail and Former Federal Territories Minister Tan Sri Zulhasnan Rafique, who would be conferred the Seri Utama Mahkota Wilayah (SUMW) award bearing the title “Datuk Seri Utama”.
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Tuanku Alhaj Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah would confer the award and medals at Istana Negara today.
Malaysia Retail Chain Association president Datuk Seri Kwok Teng Toong and Malaysia badminton Association deputy president Datuk Seri Mohamad Norza Zakaria are among the 15 recipients of the Darjah Seri Mahkota Wilayah (DSMW) awards carrying the title Datuk Seri.
Other DSMW award recipients include Dr Rahmat Bivi Yusoff (Prime Minister’s Office), Othman Mahmood (Prime Minister’s Office) and Rahim Baba (Koperasi Ukhwah).
The Datuk Seri title would also be conferred to Maglin Dennic Dcruz (PPP), Penang Umno chief Zainal Abidin Osman, and Mohd Ashraf Abdullah (Media Prima).
Others conferred Datukship include H.E Fahad Abdullah Hamad Al-Rashid (Saudi Arabia Embassy mission head), Federal Territory mufti Dr Zulkifli Mohamad Al-Bakri, Kuala Lumpur Catholic Lawyers Society committee member Joy Wilson Appukuttan, and Federal Territory MCA secretary Oong Boon See.
Federal Territories Ministry chief secretary Datuk Seri Adnan Md Ikhsan said 43 individuals would receive the Johan Mahkota Wilayah award while 69 others would receive the Kesatria Mahkota Wilayah medal.
Some 60 individuals would be conferred the Ahli Mahkota Wilayah medal, and 96 would be conferred the Pangkuan Mahkota Wilayah medal.
The medal and award presentation ceremony in conjunction with Federal Territories Day was initiated in 2008 in honour of individuals who had contributed towards the development of the federal territory.
Source: http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2015/02/01/Jackie-Chan-now-a-Datuk-HK-actor-among-71-recipients-of-Federal-Territories-Day-awards/
The Star - Malaysia