Wednesday, 27 November 2013

United squad in air scare after 'frightening' plane landing had to be aborted

David Moyes and his Manchester United squad suffered a mid-air scare in Germany on Tuesday on the way to the Champions League clash with Bayer Leverkusen when their plane had to abort its  landing at Cologne airport.
United’s chartered plane was just 400 metres from touching down at Cologne airport when the pilot reacted rapidly after realising another aircraft was already on the runway.
As the Barclays Premier League club’s players were thrown back in their seats, the Monarch aircraft had to regain height quickly to avoid any chance of a collision.
Relaxed: Ashley Young and Jonny Evans at Manchester Airport before their flight to Cologne
Relaxed: Ashley Young and Jonny Evans at Manchester Airport before their flight to Cologne
Hairy moment: Rio Ferdinand tweeted that he had 'just recovered from a choppy landing'
Hairy moment: Rio Ferdinand tweeted that he had 'just recovered from a choppy landing'
David Moyes
Wayne Rooney
Serious: David Moyes and Wayne Rooney looking less enthusiastic at Manchester Airport
The whole United squad, including players, manager David Moyes, and all the backroom staff, were all on board.
United defender Rio Ferdinand tweeted on touchdown: ‘Landed in Germany... just... I’ve only just recovered after that choppy landing.’
Another passenger called the experience 'frightening'.
It is understood that the pilot emerged from the flight deck after the incident to apologise to the United party and explain that they had not been in any danger.
Sir Bobby Charlton, who was present in the Munch air disaster in 1958, and Sir Alex Ferguson were not on board.
All smiles: David Moyes was happy enough when he gave a press conference in Germany
All smiles: David Moyes was happy enough when he gave a press conference in Germany
Cheery: Chris Smalling was also in buoyant mood despite the air scare
Cheery: Chris Smalling was also in buoyant mood despite the air scare


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2514062/Manchester-United-squad-frightening-plane-landing-aborted.html#ixzz2lp88Qiks
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Tuesday, 26 November 2013

400 foreign students scammed



PETALING JAYA: Some 400 foreign students are crying foul over a college scam that saw them lose RM8mil on a non-existent diploma programme.

The students had paid RM20,000 each in tuition fees but later found out that the college did not offer such programmes.

Student Faheem Khan, 24, said he came from India for a diploma course in cruise management at a local college as he was promised a high salary and job placement after the programme.

“Instead of going to classes, we were sent to work at a five-star hotel for about 12 to 16 hours a day under the pretext of doing an internship,” he told a press conference organised by Tenaganita, here, yesterday.

Faheem said he filed a refund claim at the Consumer Tribunal and won the case but the private college appealed to the High Court.

“On Nov 19, the High Court upheld the decision but I am still afraid that the college might appeal again,” he said, adding that a police report against the college has been made.

Nepalese national Rojinna Risal, 22, quit her job at her home country as she thought that it was a reputable international college.

“The recruitment officer told us that we were guaranteed internship places at recognised cruise companies with salaries starting from RM4,838 to RM8,063.

“But they forced us to work at hotels instead.

“Our visas will expire soon and I am afraid that the college will get away with our money,” she said.

Tenaganita executive director Dr Irene Fernandez urged the authorities to seal the operations of the private college because it is still recruiting students from all over the world.

Deputy Education Minister P. Kamalanathan said the ministry would investigate the allegations against the institution, reports KANG SOON CHEN.

“We do not condone such practices.

“Action will be taken against the college if the allegations are true,” he said, adding that the ministry viewed the issue seriously because it could tarnish the image of the country as an international education hub.

London slave could be missing leftist Siti Aishah, says ex-activist

A 69-year-old Malaysian woman held as a slave in a London "collective" for some 30 years could be Siti Aishah Abdul Wahab, who went missing years ago, says former student activist Hishamuddin Rais.

She was one of three women freed on October 25 in London after one of them secretly contacted a charity. The other two are a 57-year-old Irish woman and a 30-year-old Briton.

British police have yet to identify any of them but said a couple have been held in connection with the case.

Hishamuddin, who went into self-exile in London in the 1970s, said Siti Aishah was active with Malaysian students in a leftist group that called itself "New Malayan Youth" in the British capital city at that time.

"Her brother sought me in 1991 to get assistance to find Aishah, who was said to be missing, as both of us come from the same district," Hishamuddin told The Malaysian Insider early today.

"I also lived in Brixton, London, where the woman was found," said Hishamuddin, who runs a blog called "TukarTiub".

He said that Siti Aishah followed Marxist-Leninist teachings and had studied the thoughts of Communist China leader, the late Mao Zedong.

The "New Malayan Youth" was mainly made up of left-leaning students from Malaysia and Singapore living in London in the 1970s.

Hishamuddin, who returned to Malaysia in 1994, said that Siti Aishah had studied in the exclusive Tunku Kursiah College in Seremban and furthered her studies in quantity surveying in London under a Colombo Plan scholarship.

Hishamuddin said he came from the same district of Jelebu in Negri Sembilan as Siti Aishah, adding that her sister was his teacher in secondary school. Hishamuddin lived in London for 15 years while studying in Brixton College. He later studied film and video at the University of Westminster, London. His last address was Coldharbour Lane, Brixton.

British dailies named those arrested as Indian-born Aravindan Balakrishnan, also known as "Comrade Bala" and his Tanzanian wife Chanda but Hishamuddin said the man was also called "Chairman Ara" and was from Singapore.

Police have confirmed that the couple were arrested in the 1970s, without disclosing any details.

Detectives have refused to confirm the identities of the couple, who are now on bail until January, pending further investigations but said the captive women were brainwashed and had reported being beaten but did not appear to have been sexually abused.

They were occasionally allowed out of the house and detectives are working to understand the "invisible handcuffs" that were used to control them.

Police revealed on Saturday that the two older victims had met their male captor through a "shared political ideology" and initially lived with him as part of a collective. Police said on Monday they were investigating 13 addresses linked to the couple, who came to Britain in the 1960s and are suspected of immigration offences as well as involvement in forced labour.

Detectives carried out house-to-house inquiries at the weekend in Brixton, one of London's poorer, more ethnically diverse districts that was the scene of anti-government riots in the 1980s.

The exact address where the women were held at have not been identified, but the police operation was centred on a modern, low-rise block of flats in Brixton's Peckford Place. – November 26, 2013.

Saturday, 23 November 2013

Failed Assassination Attempt on Ahmed Dogan


A gunman reportedly attempted to assassinate the leader of Bulgaria's Turkish ethnic party during a televised conference on Saturday.

The leader of Bulgaria’s Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF) party, Ahmed Dogan, was assaulted by a gunman while on stage at the National Palace of Culture (NDK) in Sofia, according to the Sofia Globe. The assailant, 25-year-old Oktai Enimehmedov, climbed onstage and held a gun to Dogan's head, but the gun reportedly got stuck and was unable to shoot.

Tutor accuses another of leaking SPM questions

KUALA LUMPUR: A private tutor has accused another of leaking questions to students at a seminar days before the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) Additional Mathematics paper was held.

Mohd Husaini Jaslee, 30, said he had lodged a police report on the matter on Thursday after being told about the leak by friends of some of the students who attended the seminar between Oct 25 and Nov 20.

At a press conference supported by the Muslim Consumer Association of Malaysia (PPIM) yesterday, Mohd Husaini said the seminar covered most of the SPM subjects and was held at a multipurpose hall in Setia­wangsa by another tutor.

Prior to lodging the police report, Mohd Husaini had also tried to inform the Education Ministry’s Examinations Syndicate about the matter on Tuesday.

However, he claimed that he was told to support his accusations with more evidence. He said he gathered more evidence and returned to the syndicate the next day but was told it had no power to act.

On Thursday, just before the Additional Mathematics Paper 2 began, Mohd Husaini claimed he received three images through Whatsapp of the questions and answers which actually appeared in the examination paper.

“There has been a similar case reported before in 2007 and I want to expose the matter now so that it will not happen again,” he said.

The news of the leak came just two days after a public outcry by students about the sudden change in the way the Moral Studies questions were framed.

The last two days, scores of outraged Form Five students took their anger to the media, crying foul over the change from structured questions to a more open-ended format.

The seminar continued to serve participants till press time.

The papers discussed yesterday were Chemistry and Science.

-thestar

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Malaysia 'most corrupt in the world': British investor


This is probably an investor’s worst nightmare: losing life savings and homes. And these possibilities were the last things on the minds of a group of British investors who put their money in a Malaysian company.  But according to them, that’s exactly what happened when they invested in the locally established Doxport Technologies Sdn Bhd.

In an email interview, a banker who only wanted to be known as Rahel, told us that the investment had devastated his family's life savings, including his retired father's savings.  Rahel and family invested £180,000 or close to RM1 million in Doxport.

“We had to sell the family home to cope with all the debt which built up as a result.  We had to move house several times, the debt collectors are always knocking on our door,” he said.  Rahel added that his father lost his entire savings accumulated over 40 years.

What made the matter worse, was that Rahel's daughter was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer, which needed treatment in the United States.  “It has been a tough journey so far, we had to borrow a very large sum of money for my daughter's treatment in the US for a period of three months. The ongoing cost of travel left us (with a) huge debt,” he added.

The 37-year-old said before putting money into Doxport, he thought that Malaysia, as a Muslim country, was the epicentre of innovative Islamic finance and thought the people and processes could be trusted.  “It's not like any other third world country.  Its people have evolved, have a lot of integrity, are trustworthy and are embracing international investments to develop their country. It's the safest place to invest money in Asia and foreign investors would be treated fairly,” he said.

But after the investment turned sour, Rahel said: “It is the most corrupt country in the world.  Its institutions have not evolved, lacks integrity, (there is) no transparency, no structure and their processes have no sense of controls.”

The London-based banker said Malaysia was not a place to invest in, and claimed that the government and its institutions would not assist or deal with investors “when the very obvious happens.”

“I say this with a heavy heart, after waiting five years, the authorities have done nothing,” he said referring to the investigations against Doxport.

Earlier this year, Rahel and the other investors filed a civil suit against former Umno treasurer Abdul Azim Mohd Zabidi and his IT company, Doxport, and two others, for allegedly misappropriating US$4 million (RM12.8million) in 2009.  The suit was filed against Abdul Azim, T. Sivalingam, Gurmeet Kaur, and the company itself.  Abdul Azim is the chairman of Doxport, while T. Sivalingam is the managing director of the company.  The investors want their investment returned including other damages deemed fit by the court.  In August, Gurmeet was charged by the Companies Commission of Malaysia for allegedly making a false statement in a company document.

These investors, calling themselves British Victims of Investing in Malaysia (BVIM), claimed they invested US$4 million into Doxport, which went towards equity in the firm and was to be used to purchase six VOIP Telecom Switches.   BVIM claimed that Doxport solicited these funds on a false basis using fraudulent invoices and documents.

Based on BVIM's website, about 20 UK parliamentarians and members of the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office have written to, among others, the Malaysian Prime Minister’s Office, the Malaysian High Commissioner in the UK and the Malaysian Attorney-General.  The group claimed they have not gotten a reply or acknowledgment for these letters.

In a second email interview, another banker told us he suffered similar losses as Rahel.  Only wanting to be known as Steve, he said the investment totally ruined his plans for the future.

“We could not buy the house we wanted to buy and had to move out of London and live in rented accommodation for a few years.  Almost all of my life savings were taken away from us unlawfully,” said this 42-year-old.  This father of three said he did not have any impressions of Malaysia prior to the investment, but did not realise that “the rule of law and justice were so hard to get” here.

Steve, who is based in Buckinghamshire, was unwilling to share the amount invested in the business, but added that it involved almost all his life savings.  He said Malaysia was not a country for investment, claiming it was too corrupt, while advising other investors to stay away.

We met with another two investors, Naeem Darr and Riaz Ramzan, who were working with authorities here in the investigation of this case.   “We want people to be extra careful and do not want anyone to go through what we have gone through,” Naeem said.

He added that he and Riaz wanted justice for the group as they had involved their family members and friends into this failed investment.  The pair told us that they met with Najib, former deputy international trade and industry minister Mukhriz Mahathir in 2010 over the issues. They also met with former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad.

In October, BVIM protested outside the World Islamic Economic Forum in London, where Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak was patron.  The group were voicing their disappointment over the duration it took for 'justice to be done' in Malaysia, as the investigations had gone into its second year.

And in early November, reports quoted Doxport's Sivalingam as stating that BVIM had unfairly accused the company of embezzling money.

Sivalingam had said the company had not collected any money or provided any documents to any of the 60 investors. He claimed the protesters from the October rally were from another firm and that it has taken Doxport to court.

He had said Doxport was now dormant, and that the company would answer all the allegations made against it in court.

- Yahoo Malaysia News

Guilty of contempt! Ibrahim Ali lands in jail

Perkasa president Ibrahim Ali has been slapped with a one-day jail sentence and RM20,000 fine after being found guilty by the Kuala Lumpur High Court of contempt.

This followed the publication of an article by Zainuddin Salleh which was published on the Perkasa website.

The article questioned the integrity of another High Court judge VT Singham who had since retired.

The author had alleged that Singham, who was hearing the suit filed by Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim against Utusan Malaysia then, was pro-opposition.

Zainuddin had also questioned the judge's sexual orientation for being a bachelor.

For this, the author was sentenced to four weeks jail.

The sentence was meted by Justice John Louis O Hara.

Following the judgment, Ibrahim would stay at the Kuala Lumpur court complex lock-up until 5pm today.

- Malaysiakini