August 30, 2009

Closing a Dark Chapter

Today marks the closure of Australia's involvement in that much tragic Vietnam War.

Her last two servicemen missing in action from the Vietnam war have begun their final journey home.

Family members and former comrades farwelled Flying Officer Michael Herbert and Pilot Officer Robert Carver today in Hanoi, Vietnam, and are escorting their remains back to Australia aboard an RAAF plane.

They're due to arrive at the RAAF Richmond Base in Sydney's northwest tomorrow morning at 10.30 (AEST).

The remains of Officers Herbert and Carver were found near Vietnam's border with Laos last month. They had been missing in action since the 1970s after their plane crashed.

August 29, 2009

Reading Materials-Four Stages of Life

This 4-piece cartoon screams out at us.

How true.

If you are in your forties now, you can reflect back on the times where everything was not important except for the funny pages. Then the sports pages beckon as you jockeyed to be a jock and not a geek or a nerd at school and college. Once you join the work-force and mosey up the ranks on the corporate ladder, news became the central interest. After 60, obituaries are the first pages you would turn to. Who has died? Your relatives, friends, colleagues or enemies? Do you feel saddened or do you gloat at their demise?

Ahoy there! Big Brother speaking here.................

It started with an incursion into territorial waters in oil exploration in the Ambalat Block. Then Manohara escaped from a hotel in Singapore to tell the world of the atrocities inflicted upon her by a Malaysian prince.Then there was last month's bombing of two hotels in Jakarta where the mastermind was purportedly a Malaysian terrorist now at large somewhere in Indonesia. Then it was a A brouhaha in Indonesia over Malaysia’s usage of the Balinese pendet dance in a tourism commercial. Today they went for the bullet! They are asking how the Malaysian anthem seems to sound like their song “Terang Bulan” (Moon Shine).

Wow, Big Brother in Nusantara is not letting up!

Malaysia's answer as usual was scripted. They summarily apologized for the use of the Balinese dance but said the mistake was made by a third party who was paid by Malaysia’s Tourism Ministry to produce the commercial. What bunkum and another political blooper! The Malaysian embassy in Jakarta tried to soothe frazzled nerves by playing the lawyer. It issued a statement: “Nobody in Malaysia claimed that the pendet dance originated in Malaysia.”

But that is not the end of the story.

A report in yesterday’s Jakarta Globe newspaper quoted an executive from a state-owned recording company asking why Malaysia’s national anthem “Negaraku” sounded like the Indonesian song “Terang Bulan” (Moon Shine).Ruktiningsih, the head of recording company Lokananta, urged the Indonesian government to act on the “violation of intellectual property rights”.“We have to unite against Malaysia, as they keep stealing Indonesia’s assets,” he added.

An Internet search found that both songs do indeed share the same roots. Malaysia acknowledges as much on a government website detailing its monarchy system.

The song “Terang Bulan” comes from a popular French melody in the Seychelles, which spread to the Malay archipelago in the early 20th century.It was adopted as Perak’s state anthem in 1901. And in 1957, it became the national anthem for Malaysia with the lyrics changed.

This tangle is just one of many controversies between the neighbours. Indonesians see Malaysia as appropriating their cultural assets, while Malaysians say these have been part of their culture for as long as anyone can remember.

The controversies include batik designs and the popular “Rasa Sayang” ditty. The neighbours have also not settled overlapping claims in the oil and gas-rich Ambalat area in the Sulawesi Sea.

What next, you may ask?

August 28, 2009

A John School?

It was a John Doe if a corpse cannot be identified. Now, we have a John School.

Let us read the following story. Real eye-revealing one at that.

The accused came from all walks of life: Retirees, dads and twenty-somethings. An engineer, a business owner and an auto worker. A man in a wheelchair. Men in need of Spanish or Farsi translators.

About 40 men somberly entered a classroom on a recent Saturday morning. About half of them wore shiny wedding bands.

All had tried to buy a prostitute's services and were caught by police. It was their first offense, and a county court referred them to a one-day programme interestingly called the John School. It's a programme run by volunteers and city officials in conjunction with Magdalene House, a non-profit that works to get prostitutes off the streets.

"Prostitution doesn't discriminate," said Kenny Baker, a cognitive behavioural therapist who is the programme's director. "Most of these men don't have a prior criminal history, so our goal is to help these folks understand why they put themselves in a bad position, to prevent it from happening again."

Set in a church in Nashville, Tennessee, the John School is led by former prostitutes, health experts, psychologists and law enforcement officers who talk to — and at times berate — the men about the risks of hiring a prostitute.

Prostitution is based on the law of supply and demand. The thinking is: Women won't stop selling sex until men stop buying.

So Nashville and a growing number of cities are shifting their focus from locking up suppliers to educating buyers. Across the country, about 50 communities are using John Schools. Atlanta, Georgia, and Baltimore, Maryland, are among dozens more cities that plan to launch similar programmes by the end of the year.

"It will make them [offenders] see that this is not a victimless crime, and they are contributing to the exploitation of women," said Stephanie Davis, policy adviser on women's issues at the mayor's office in Atlanta. "It's hurting them, the man, and it's hurting their families and its hurting the community."

Experts add that easy accessibility to prostitutes and pornography on the Internet are feeding the problem.

In most communities, prostitution has been a one-sided battle focused on the women who offer sex. Their customers, when they are arrested, are usually cited for a misdemeanour and fined.

By comparison, prostitutes are often charged with more severe sentences and jailed for months, depending on the offense.

But in Nashville, the johns' faces are shown on a police website.

For decades, Nashville battled prostitution by arresting women on the streets and through stings. Still, the problem persisted, irritating business owners and residents.

In the early 1990s, Nashville's mayor helped launch the John School with the help of the Magdalene House, public defenders, prosecutors and police officers. Nashville became one of the first major cities in the US to focus on the customers, predominantly men.

Only first-time offenders who solicit an adult are eligible for John School. Johns who pick up minors are not eligible and face much tougher sentences.

"If you get caught again and you get me, I will guarantee to put you in jail," warned Antoinette Welch, a local prosecutor, in speaking to the men in the class. "I've had men cry to me that they will lose their jobs or their wives, but you're all grown up and you make your own decisions."

The men listened carefully as Welch talked about their records; many had not yet told their wives or significant others about their arrest.

If the john pleads guilty, pays a US$250 fee and completes the course without re-offending, the charge can be dismissed after a year. The money paid by the john goes to Magdalene House; the programme doesn't cost taxpayers any money. John School models in other communities may differ.

A woman who called herself Alexis, a 35-year-old former prostitute with dark hair and bright blue eyes, spoke to the men as the class came to an end. Four years ago, she left the streets and now works at a factory.

By the age of 10, Alexis had learned to barter with sex with her stepfather. In her 20s, she found herself hooked on drugs and selling her body. She was arrested more than 80 times. She was hospitalized after someone shot her on the job.

As she told her story, the men were silent. A few blushed, while others stared at the floor.

"These gentlemen are no different than I was on the streets," she said. "I think everyone has to look at the void they are trying to fill."

One john, a father of two with salt-and-pepper hair, found himself near tears after Alexis spoke. In July, he tried to pick up a prostitute through Craigslist. He said he was depressed and having problems with his wife.

"I'm so embarrassed," he said. "These girls are somebody's daughters. I have a daughter."

Some evidence suggests that John Schools are working. A study released in 2008 by Abt Associates Inc for the federal government looked at the John School programme in San Francisco, California. It's one of the largest programmes in the country; more than 7,000 johns have attended since 1995.

According to the study, the re-arrest rate fell sharply after the school was launched, and stayed more than 30 per cent lower for 10 years afterward.

But critics call John School a slap on the wrist. On Saturday, one john abandoned the classroom.

Carol Leigh, a member of the Sex Workers Outreach Project, a group that promotes legalising prostitution in California, said she doesn't believe the programme is an effective deterrent. Last year, she helped advocate on behalf of a law known as Proposition K that would legalise prostitution in San Fransisco. The proposal was rejected by the city.

"John School doesn't do that much," said Leigh, who has worked as a prostitute. "The reality is they aren't spending that much time on the johns and they will just go to other venues. This also doesn't target the violent offenders who are the real problem."

Melissa Farley, head of the non-profit group Prostitution Research and Education in San Fransisco, believes johns deserve stronger punishment like longer prison sentences.

A recent study she conducted among johns in Chicago, Illinois, found that 41 per cent of them said John School would deter them from buying sex, compared with 92 per cent who said being placed on a sex offender registry would scare them from re-offending.

Nashville officials said they haven't tracked recidivism rates in their city, but the school's programme director said it's probably deterring a third of the offenders in each class.

At least one college educated, 47-year-old john's attitude appeared to change on a recent Saturday.

After class he wrote, "There is no good part. I would rather be with my wife. This was quick but it wasn't worth it."

So, do you think a John School can help in reducing the problem of prostitution addiction in your country if implemented?

August 27, 2009

Idris Jala 's Star is Rising Faster than MAS

Has PM Najib found the perfect Sarawakian to include into his Cabinet?

Yesterday (27 Aug 2009), Idris Jala, The CEO of MAS, was appointed a minister in the Malaysian Cabinet. As a perfectionist and profesional, PM Najib expects a surgery job from Idris on his non-performing cabinet members. That he inherited the bulk of the Cabinet from the former premier meant plenty of nasty work has to be done by Idris, without fear or favour.

As November approaches, PM Najib will review his Cabinet line-up and dropped those he agreed with Idris, off the precipice! There are many from UMNO that needs replacement. For Najib,a man of vision and mission, he will stop at nothing to achieve his global vision of bringing back Malaysia into the ranks of the democratically run governments, excelling in bringing wealth to his people.

Making Idris to focus on a narrow portfolio of oversighting Key Performance Index (KPI) will make him a man to fear both from the Cabinet ministers, senior civil servants and GLC heads. For many the holiday may just be over, particularly those helming GLCs and overstaying civil servants.

The time has surely come for Najib to make his mark. He does not need all those dead duck albatrosses hanging on his neck.

For the next three months, Idris will be the MAN OF THE HOUR!

Is Mercury Rising for Genting Malaysia?


Will this news propel Genting Malaysia to yet another height?

Ian C. Sayson from Bloomberg has this to report.

Aug. 28 -- Philippine billionaire Andrew Tan and Star Cruises Ltd. will today open their $700 million Resorts World Manila, which may more than double the city’s casino revenue.

“Our expectation is this will contribute to earnings within the first year of operations,” said Kingson Sian, president of Alliance Global Group Inc., the holding company of Tan, the Philippines’ fourth-richest person. “We believe in the potential of Philippine tourism.”

The venture, Travellers International Hotel Group Inc., will open the first floor of a three-level casino at a complex that will include hotels and a shopping mall. Resorts World Manila may earn 21 billion pesos ($430 million) in gambling revenue next year, compared with the city’s 17 billion pesos in 2008, according to Macquarie Group Ltd. analysts.

“This can create a lot of buzz and attract regional players into the Philippines,” said Manila-based CLSA Ltd. analyst Raffy Manalaysay. “It can help the government to get its casino project moving.”

Alliance Global rose 5 percent to 5.10 pesos yesterday in Manila trading, boosting its gain this year to 193 percent. Star Cruises’ Hong Kong-traded and Singapore-listed shares have more than tripled.

The resort will draw 11.1 million visitors and raise $315 million in gambling taxes over three years, Sian said.

On earnings, it is estimated that Travellers Hotels and Casino will make 6.41 billion pesos in net income next year on espected sales of 23.04 billion pesos, Macquarie analysts Nadine Javellana, Edward Ong and Alex Pomento said in an Aug. 10 report. The company’s profit will reach 7.44 billion pesos in 2011 on revenue of 25.02 billion pesos, they added.

Sian declined to comment on Macquarie’s forecasts.

The participation of Star Cruises will allow the project to tap the cruise operator’s network of more than 2.5 million customers, he said. Star Cruises operates casinos on its ships.

The resort will provide bus services for Filipinos living outside Manila, Sian said.

“The whole idea for this kind of investment is to grow the market and not grab from the existing businesses,” he added. We have a product that we can market for tourists to come in a big way. This is not just a casino.”

The project, occupying part of a former military camp near Manila’s airport, will have three hotels with 1,574 rooms, a 30,000 square meter (323,000 square feet) casino and a 30,000 square meter shopping mall.

The resort’s casino will have 300 tables and more than 1,000 slot machines by the end of the year, when all three floors will be ready, Sian said. The 100 tables that will be ready today already make it the Philippines’ biggest casino.

On Asia’s gambling boom, Philippine Amusement, the casino regulator and state-owned casino operator, owns four casinos in Manila with a total of 293 tables, according government data. Pagcor Pavilion, the state-owned company’s biggest casino, has 92 tables. The opening of Resorts World Manila is another step in the Philippines’ effort to tap Asia’s gambling boom. The casino resort could gain a 2 percent share of revenue earned from high rollers in Asia, estimated at $10.9 billion, the Macquarie analysts said.

Macau, the only city in China where casinos are legal, surpassed the Las Vegas Strip as the world’s biggest gambling hub in 2006. In Singapore, Las Vegas Sands Corp. is building the Marina Bay Sands casino resort, estimated to cost more than $5.25 billion, to compete with the S$6.6 billion ($4.6 billion) project being built by Malaysian casino operator Genting Bhd.

Travellers is one of four groups that won approval last year to build hotels and casinos within the $20 billion Pagcor City on Manila Bay, a project of the government’s Philippine Amusement & Gaming Corp. Sian said Travellers may start building its share of the project as early as next year. The venture last year committed to spend $1.1 billion to develop 91 acres in Pagcor City into a complex of hotels with 3,400 rooms and a theme park.

Star Cruises is controlled by Genting and its Chairman Lim Kok Thay, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Genting shares have gained 78 percent this year.

Can we cystal ball gaze the potential price of Genting and Genting Malaysia when this project come on steam? Any ball park prices?

GDP Q2-Better than Expected!

The Malaysian economy contracted only 3.9 per cent in the second quarter of 2009. This was much better than market expectation of minus 5.1 per cent.

The smaller than expected contraction was a major improvement over the country's Q1 shrinkage of 6.2 per cent. With the latest numbers, the central bank summed up the economy retreated 5.1 per cent in the first half of the year.

Compared with other Asian economies, stimulus packages announced by Prime Minister Najib showed little sign of kicking in, with public consumption growing just one per cent.

Manokaran Mottain, an economist with the Arab-Malaysian Banking Group while saying that "it's an impressive performance, given that most of us thought it would be worse,” added the figure seems to suggest that the pump-priming stimulus money has not made the desired effect upon the economy.

The better than expected performance shows that Malaysia, like the rest of Asia, is exhibiting “green shoots”.Kuala Lumpur must certainly be worried about the economy's seeming lack of response to Najib's stimulus packages announced as far back as March.

The GDP figures, released by the central bank yesterday, showed the economy's better performance was driven largely by services (1.6 per cent) and construction (2.8 per cent).

Manufacturing was hit hardest, shrinking 14.5 per cent in Q2 after a Q1 decline of almost 18 per cent. This is not good.

Equally worrisome was the Malaysia 's export performance. Output shrank 17.3 per cent, while imports registered a 19.7 per cent correction. Bank Negara attributed this to “weak external demand”.

Surprisingly, the central bank provided no figures for investment — neither public nor private — although it did say total consumption grew 0.6 per cent in Q2, after contracting 0.2 per cent in Q1.

Inflation continued to fall. In July it dipped 2.4 per cent, allowing the central bank to keep interest rates low and conducive to growth. On Monday, the bank maintained its overnight policy rate at a historic low of 2 per cent. And with near-deflation persisting, it is likely to keep rates low until the second half of 2010.

“We expect a gradual recovery,” central bank governor Zeti Aziz told a news conference. The economic contraction in 2009 will be smaller than expected, she said without elaborating.

Any one for some more crystal ball gazing?