Immediate Benefits When You Stop Smoking

In addition to the “supply” of haze from Indonesia, this is a good article for smokers to read and think about in this season of serious air pollution in Malaysia.

Read healthbolt’s article entitled “What Happens to Your body if you stop smoking Right now?” here:

<URL:http://healthbolt.net/2006/07/19/what-happens-to-your-body-if-you-stop-smoking-right-now/>

For Chinese-literate folks, here is the Google-translated version:

Immediate Benefits When You Stop Smoking
PS: I’m organizing an elite team of assassins who will be infiltrating Sumatra and disengaging the targets who are responsible for the open burning. Interested parties, please contact me discreetly. Trained and/or experienced personnel preferred. For background reading, please click here.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Share

Three Year Old Boy Brutally Abused To Death in Malaysia

Lau Jun Wei

Lau Jun Wei

On October 5 2006, a close relative of three-year-old Lau Jun Wei and her boyfriend rushed into a doctor’s clinic in Taman University, Johor Baru with the boy in their arms no longer breathing. The couple claimed that Jun Wei suffered a fall. The doctor was shocked by the boy’s injuries and said she has never seen such a condition in a child in her 21 years of practice. She could not even sleep that night.

There were indications of hot water scalding all over his body. He had injuries at the back of his head, genitals and rectum. Jun Wei’s eyes were blue-black. He had marks on his hands and legs suggesting that he was tied up. His buttocks showed that he was repeatedly whipped. Cigarette burns on his thighs were found.

The doctor knew that the boy was already dead and reported the case to the police, suspecting that there was child abuse involved. Johor Baru police has arrested the 22-year-old unemployed woman and her 23-year-old boyfriend for murder investigations. They will be remanded until October 16.

Jun Wei is believed to have lived in a terrible condition. The suspects often lock him up in the room with a little dog while they went out.

Condition of room where Jun Wei was locked in

Condition of room where Jun Wei was locked in

The suspects rented two rooms in a house along Jalan Kebudayaan, Taman University which belongs to the woman’s brother-in-law. They have been staying there since three months ago. The parents of the boy seperated and the father is believed to be on the run from loan sharks. However, it seems that the female suspect is actually the mother of Jun Wei.

The suspected couple

The suspected couple

The house was also shared by several other tenants, who suspect something was amiss about the boy but did not do anything about it. They heard the boy crying occasionally and loud thumping sounds after midnight. Jun Wei was seldom out of the room.

Jun Wei used to live in Muar with his paternal uncle since he was born, but the female suspect took him away five months ago. Before that, Jun Wei was described as a cheerful and outgoing boy. The uncle met up with Jun Wei three months later and noticed that he was very quiet.

The post-mortem report released on October 6 showed that several major blows to the back of Jun Wei’s skull inflicted a few days ago caused massive internal bleeding. Thus, blue-black marks around his eyes appeared. He could have gone into a coma before he was rushed to the clinic.

Jun Wei’s body was released to his grandmother and uncle from Muar. The grandmother was weeping as she said she last saw Jun Wei two months ago. She said she kissed him on the forehead and asked if he was alright and he started to cry. Had she realized that there was something wrong with Jun Wei, she would have kept him away from the place of horror in Taman Univerisiti.


Vijayakumari Pillai of Kajang wrote to the New Straits Times on October 9 2006, imploring the authorities to charge the family members, as accorded by Section 28 of the Child Act 2001. It states that if any member of the family or guardian of a child who believes on reasonable grounds that the child is abused, neglected or abandoned, shall immediately inform a protector. Failure to comply is classified as an offence.

A member of the family includes the parents, guardian, and household members, who reside in the same household as the child.

Pillai feels that this law is not given enough publicity and that “the public should be made aware of the consequences of such apathy”.


Public apathy is one of the culprits in this case, along with many other social problems in this country. Family members and neighbours should have been pro-active in their suspicions and protect the child. There is hardly any excuse for these parties to not notice a problem in the boy as the symptoms and lack of proper care are obvious to see.

If you know of a child who is suffering from abuse or neglect, please take action and deal with the child’s caretaker.

The laws protecting children should be given more publicity and the courts must exercise the full extent of the law to punish the culprits.

New parents and newly-wed couples should be given adequate education and counselling on the responsibilities of having children. They should be made to realize how important and delicate care should be given to raising children and not dive into parenthood without proper consideration and practical planning.

The Government should take an active role in providing child welfare services, much like the United States. Child Protective Services (CPS) should be adopted to protect children from abuse and neglect. There must be an avenue for socially-responsible people to be employed or volunteer themselves to serve the needs of CPS. Click here for an example of what CPS does.

The Department of Social Welfare and the Malaysian Association for the Protection of Children are two organizations which can help reduce child abuse cases. The president of the second one, Mohd. Sham Kasim, can be contacted at msham-at-medic.upm.edu.my.

Further reading on child welfare in Malaysia:

Implementation of Article 12 in Juvenile Justice System in Malaysia
<URL:http://www.crin.org/docs/GDD_2006_UNICEF_Malaysia2.doc>

Progress and Challenges in Human Development in Malaysia: Ideas for the Ninth Malaysia Plan
<URL:http://www.fep.um.edu.my/GayePhillipsofUNICEF.doc>

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Share

Three Viewpoints on Racial Discrimination in Malaysia

Jeff Ooi of Screenshots referenced two views on the issue of racial discrimination in Malaysia on 21 Sep 2006. I add, in part, my own below.

First View

Reuters reported Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak responding to ex-Prime Minister of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew’s criticism of mistreatment of the Malaysian Chinese people.

Lee expressed in a forum last week that Singapore should stand up to its bigger neighbours, Malaysia and Singapore, which are affected from this issue. He said “Our neighbours both have problems with their Chinese. They are successful. They are hard-working and therefore they are systemically marginalised.”

Najib responded by declaring that “Malaysia does not practise a policy of blocking opportunities for non-bumiputras to progress further. It’s a comment that we can do without. It is not appreciated at all.”

Second View

A Malaysian academic living in London, Sathia Varqa, presented a paper entitled “Positive Discrimination in Malaysia: Should we continue to favour the Malays?” on 21 Sep 2006.

In the paper, Varqa says that although Malaysia is generally known as a harmonious multi-racial society, the single discrimination of people by race has been and will be a “deep danger” to the success and stability of the country. Moreover, it is known the priority and benefits bestowed on the single group have been regularly brought to the media spotlight but has hardly been challenged or justified.

Varqa states three effects of such classification in the Malaysian society:

  • Creates partiality towards the racial group in commercial, political, and civil applications leading to corruption and unfair competition
  • Encourages negative behavioural ethics in the racial group in areas of work and social life resulting in lower market competitiveness, personal living standards and external stereotyping of such behaviour
  • Digresses actual need to tackle issues that concern all Malaysians such as the education system, transport system, environmental care, quality of basic amenities, crime control, corporate and government corruption, social responsibility and etiquettes, national pride and patriotism

Varqa charges the need for all Malaysians “to be bolder in our argument and constructive in our reasoning.”

My View

Malaysia and Indonesia are not the only countries suffering from racial discrimination. Many other countries have it, less choose to positively deal with it than desired. I can recommend a few good optometrists to Najib. Lee’s statement that the Chinese are compartmentalized because they are hardworking is not accurate; rather the Chinese stand out from the preferred racial group as a result of their attitude. It could have been, and very likely is, true if the hardworking people are not the Chinese, but the Indians or other races.

There are policies put in place to allow any or better opportunities to the Malays, and then there are policies that are in response to “adjustments” or “moderation” necessary to be made. Such moves do not serve to level criteria or privileges, by the way.

Students have seen many times when their well-earned education results do not give them even the chance to apply for scholarships. For those who do obtain them, it is often seen that the preferred group have not and do not perform as well in the subsidized programmes.

Businesses have been forced to conform to procedures that are obviously unnecessary to their business objectives in the country. When that is done, they then often have to provide favours to the preferred group in order to sustain or expand their economies. Think of the various business and government services and departments companies have to face regularly and there won’t be a need to state names here.

Malaysia is a country and in a region where all areas of growth are needed. To the north, Thailand has been an upcoming regional export market and Singapore in the south is by no little means one of the best examples of a mature and stable society. In the former Prime Minister Mahathir’s era of economic growth, there is obviously a strong desire to excel as a country among its peers.

Malaysians cannot compete among and build themselves (with good conscience and pride) and on the global arena progressively if this internal issue is not tackled at its reins and has no action taken to resolve it.

Malaysia National FlagHow does the national education quality benchmark appear when the standards are so skewed and many students are not earnestly taking advantage of their privileges? Will companies prosper or even maintain their bottom lines when they have to constantly deal with unrelated bureaucracy, corruption and unfair practices in the country? Can all the different races really live together peacefully when the physical landscape is full of partiality in terms of the law, policies and culture? How long does it take for the “Bumiputra” system to mature and justify its goals are met?

Until I can think of more to say on this serious but sorely ignored issue, I leave you with these lines.

If discrimination based on race is constitutionally permissible when those who hold the reins can come up with ‘compelling’ reasons to justify it, then constitutional guarantees acquire an accordionlike quality.” – William Orville Douglas

The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” – Edmund Burke

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Share