nuffnang ads

Friday, May 11, 2012

Medical Insurance @ Medical Card



On the subject of medical insurance, to be fair, most people realize that having medical insurance is important because medical treatment can be costly if one were to seek treatment at private hospitals. In Malaysia, we are still very fortunate because we can still relatively easily seek treatment at government or public hospitals which are heavily subsidized – unlike people in developed countries such as in the U.S., U.K., Europe, Australia, Japan, etc.  In developed countries (which we as a country aim to attain by year 2020), whilst public funded medical facilities are available, they are not so prevalent and thus are less easily accessible for those living in areas where there are none.  Most people in these countries will therefore have to rely on getting treatment at private medical facilities, but because of the high costs involved most will have no access to treatment unless they are covered by some form of medical insurance. 

Luckily for us in Malaysia, we are still able to have access to treatment at very low cost at government medical facilities.  The downside however is having to contend with the huge crowds seeking treatment at Government hospitals and the consequently long waiting time.  This is unavoidable simply because government facilities are affordable, and therefore most people, rich and poor alike, will want to seek treatment there – the rich if they didn’t mind the wait, the poor because they had no choice.

To give an example of this at our government hospitals, a few years back, there was a case of a 76 year old man who had a fall and fractured his pelvis and thigh bone (femur). Being a government pensioner, he enjoyed (almost) free medical treatment at government hospitals.  (Note that even for non-civil servants the costs of medical treatment are just nominal and still very affordable to most.)  Naturally, the man was admitted into a government hospital, a well known one with excellent facilities.  The doctor who examined him ordered surgery to repair the fractures.  In the meantime traction was administered for his fractured leg in order to prevent further injury.  An appointment for surgery was set for about two weeks or so depending on availability.  This was unavoidable simply because with the limited facilitiesavailable doctors had to ensure that those with more critical or life threatening injuries were given preference for surgery.  Now having to lie on a hospital bed (thankfully this hospital was air-conditioned) with one leg immobilized by traction and with as little movement as possible permitted for two whole weeks can be awfully agonizing!  Needless to say, if one can’t afford to seek treatment and surgery elsewhere, there will be no choice but to continue in that state and wait the two weeks or so out.

Fortunately for the man, his family could afford the additional costs of about RM20,000 to seek treatment at a private medical facility, and off he was transferred to one close by.  Surgery was carried out the day after and just about a week later, he was discharged from the private hospital.  

This is but an example of a relatively minor problem which involved about RM20,000 in treatment costs.  What if it were something more serious and the costs had been higher?  Say, RM50,000 or RM100,000 or even RM200,000?  With the double-digit rate of inflation in costs of medical treatment, it would not be surprising at all if a procedure which today costs RM50,000 may very well cost RM209,000 in 15 years’ time (just using an inflation rate of 10% - statistics for Malaysia from the World Health Organization website show the rate to be higher).
  See the table on current costs of certain medical procedures – note however, these costs do not take into consideration costs of hospitalization, ICU, etc. yet.

If it costs RM200,000 for a treatment that we need, do we have the financial resources to pay for it?  If not, what are our alternatives?

Fortunately, for those who are in employment generally would enjoy some form of coverage from their employers.  However prudence dictates that we ought to find out what and how much are we covered for exactly.  In fact, not too long ago, a very senior executive of a very large public listed conglomerate discovered to his own dismay that his medical coverage entitlement had a limit of just RM30,000 per annum – after he had undergone a heart bypass operation which had cost RM65,000.  The poor chap had to pay the balance (of RM35,000) from his own pockets – what a way to learn. 
 

To add salt to the wound, the man was retiring the following year.  Double jeopardy for him in that he now had RM35,000 less in retirement funds as he had used part of his retirement funds for the surgery, and secondly, the prospect of him qualifying for medical insurance upon his retirement has now become pretty slim.  Even if he did qualify, the premiums would have been substantially higher because of his age and health condition, and besides that it would have been very likely that his coverage would have a permanent exclusion on treatment for heart related diseases which is now a pre-existing condition.

Suffice it to say therefore that people who are currently covered under their employer’s Group Hospitalisation and Surgical Policy will still need to consider the following:
  • As mentioned above, we’d need to find out what and how much are we covered for – to make sure the coverage is adequate, and whether it is in our employment contract that the employer will pay for any medical expense above the insured amounts. 
  • Getting a medical insurance policy after retirement may perhaps be one of the worst approaches simply because we might not qualify for medical insurance when we retire – there have been lots of such cases.  Secondly, even if we are of excellent health, the premiums will be very high, and surely, we will not want to incur such high expenses when we are retired.
  • If I were to get a separate medical policy of my own, wouldn’t it be a waste of my money because surely I can’t claim from my employer’s as well as from my own medical policies.  While that is correct, today there are medical insurance policies which are designed to have high deductibles (that is, the first amount of the expense that we will pay for ourselves) and therefore have much lower premiums.  The large deductible will mean that the first layer of expense can be covered by our employer’s policy leaving only the amounts exceeding the limit to be claimed under our own policy.  Further, some of such medical policies even allow for the deductibles to be removed when we retire – i.e. the insurer guarantees that we will continue to be insured when we retire.
  • Determining how much is adequate for a medical insurance policy can be pretty tricky.  A sum of RM100,000 might be adequate today for many types of medical treatments, but would the same be adequate in the years to come?  There are medical insurance plans today that have a benefit called “annual limit waiver” which effectively allows one to have access to the high lifetime limits, usually 10x the annual limits.  For instance, if one had a medical insurance plan that had an annual limit of RM50,000, the lifetime limit would be RM500,000. In this case, therefore, if the person had a medical treatment that costs., say RM250,000, he would still be able to claim for these expenses as they would still be below the lifetime limit.  Very useful benefit to have, but usually the premium for this benefit can be very high especially for those in the older age category.

Now, in general, whether we are covered by our employers or not, we need to ask ourselves:
  • Am I in the financial position to self-insure?  To answer this question, we can ask ourselves; have I set aside a reasonable amount of money to cater for my medical expenses – say, have a sum of at least RM100,000 today not to be used for anything else?
  • If I can’t even afford the insurance premium today, what will I do if I am faced with a huge medical bill tomorrow?  This is of course a tough question.  Some will just throw their hands in the air and say; well, that’s just my fate.  Only God can help….  true, but remember, God helps those who help themselves.

Anyone need a Medical Insurance @ Medical Card, please contact me at ;
Muhammad Mageswaran - 012-590289


We have the Best Medical Card in Malaysia, you should own one, because you deserves the Best Medical Services and Specialist Doctor.
The BrandLaureate Awards 2010-2011
Best Brands in Medical Insurance
Best Medical Card In Malaysia
The Brand Laureate Awards is given out to deserving winners who are considered Captains of their Industries. It certainly is an endorsement of Mcis Zurich Brand and Character




Friday, April 27, 2012

What a "F__K" ..... Election Commission

What a f__k he is talking about.... (please read below) ... They have a Tun Dr Mahathir sindrom that called 'Melayu mudah lupa'. Ec Chief and his deputy can't remember when they become UMNO member..... ha ha ha ... its a joke of a day .

One more thing he say are 'I am a government servant' ... The government of today are Barisan Nasional .. So he is Barisan Nasional man..

So u pikirlah sendiri......

Malaysian are not stupid anymore .... but you are .... Thank you for this stupid remark .... its mean his mouth move faster than his brains....

Whatever it is .. life goes on ....




_________________________________________________________
NEWS/COMMENTARIES By Shazwan Mustafa Kamal - April 27, 2012 – Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUMPUR, April 27 — Both the Election Commission (EC) chairman and deputy chairman have admitted that they could have been Umno members a long time ago, but stressed that it did not affect their ability to carry out their professional duties.
Chairman Tan Sri Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof and his deputy Datuk Wan Ahmad Wan Omar took great pains to point out that it (being Umno members) happened a long time ago, and that they were inactive members, having not paid any fees or attended any party meetings.

Abdul Aziz can’t remember when and where he became an Umno member. — Picture by Choo Choy May

I can’t remember when and where I once became an Umno member, anyone could have put my name in after I graduated from university in the 1970s.

“I can’t even remember which branch (I was an Umno member in) because after I finished my studies I lived in several areas — Segambut, Selayang and Ampang. So if anyone had named me (as an Umno member) I don’t know which branch,” Abdul Aziz told Sinar Harian.
Wan Ahmad confirmed that he was an Umno member, but like Abdul Aziz, he too claimed he could not remember which Umno branch he was registered in.

When asked whether he was still an Umno member, Wan Ahmad said: “I don’t know and have never bothered to find out. I am not a politician, I am a government servant and this has stayed till this day. I am speaking the truth.”

Wan Ahmad stressed that all government servants were barred from being active members in any political party, and that they had to relinquish their government posts if they wanted to do so.
“I am still in service (as a government) servant) and that it proof that I am not an active (Umno) member,” he said.

Similarly, Abdul Aziz said that being an Umno member did not make him biased in any way when it came to running the EC.
“I’ve never felt tied down in all my years here (in the EC),” he said.

Both the EC chief and deputy chief were accused yesterday of being Umno members, with a senior PKR official alleging that he had evidence of their membership in the ruling party.
The duo have come under intense scrutiny in the past year over claims of fraud in election practices and the electoral roll as federal polls draw near.

“I know Aziz’s membership number and I have information on which branch Tan Sri Aziz and his deputy are from.
“This is the only EC in the world where its chief and his deputy are officially members of a party that contests elections,” Sinar Harian quoted PKR secretary-general Datuk Saifuddin Nasution as saying.

The Machang MP then challenged the duo to prove they were not members of the senior party in the ruling coalition, failing which he would reveal the branches to which he alleged they belong.
He also told the Malay-language national daily that Tan Sri Pandikar Amin Mulia, who quit the Kota Marudu Umno when he was appointed Dewan Rakyat Speaker in 2008, had informed him that the EC’s top two officers were still party members.

The EC was heavily criticised in the lead-up to Bersih’s rally for free and fair elections on July 9 last year in which tens of thousands flooded the streets of the capital in chaotic scenes that saw over 1,500 arrested, scores injured and the death of an ex-soldier.
Widespread condemnation of the Najib administration’s clampdown saw Putrajaya make major concessions including announcing a bipartisan Parliamentary Select Committee to look into improving the electoral system.

During the committee’s six-month tenure, Pakatan Rakyat (PR) accused the EC of not being committed to reforms and eventually rejected the panel’s findings.
Early this month, Bersih, a coalition of 84 civil societies, also announced a sit-in protest at Dataran Merdeka for tomorrow, saying the findings of the select committee were disappointing and did not meet its demands for electoral reform.

Abdul Aziz became EC chairman on January 2009 while Wan Ahmad was appointed in 2007






Monday, February 20, 2012

From Malaysiakini please read ; Mechanic: Gun pointed at my head to force confession





Malaysiakini  Hafiz Yatim  3:19PM Feb 20, 2012
A 42-year-old mechanic has claimed that he was stopped and assaulted by eight Rela personnel after filling petrol in his car in Kajang four days ago.

On top of that, when the Rela officers turned him in to the Taming Jaya police station, he was assaulted by four police personnel who allegedly wanted him to admit to car and lorry theft.

S Mogan (left), of Balakong, said his ordeal began about 5am before he was to meet a friend who had sought his help at his workshop and house.

“I decided to fill up my car with petrol as I wanted to send my children to school soon after. As soon as I filled up, I was stopped by the Rela personnel who accused me of car theft,” he said at a press conference today.

“They searched my Nissan Sunny car and saw that I had many spare parts. I told them that I am a mechanic but this was met with one of them using a metal rod to hit my left leg. Then the other Rela personnel assaulted me, punching and kicking me on the body and in the back.”

Mogan said he was then taken to the Taming Jaya police station by the Rela personnel where they told the police that he was a drug addict.

There, the police personnel allegedly assaulted him with a water hose and hit him on the feet, to get him to confess to stealing cars and lorries.

“At one point, one of them pointed a gun at my head, threatening to kill me if I did not confess. The police officers showed me vehicles (outside the police station that they said) had been stolen. (They said the cases) remained unsolved and (that they) would put the blame on me to have the cases closed.

“They continued to beat me on the feet and shouted verbal abuse. I was in severe pain as I suspected that my left leg had been fractured by the use of the iron rod.

“When they pointed the gun at my head, I told them to shoot me as I could not stand the pain. They wanted me to sign a blank letter but I refused.”

Mogan, who said he was held at Taming Jaya from 6am to 9am, was taken to the Kajang district police station where a police officer put him through a urine test.

Mogan, who is married and has three children, said the officer also checked his background and noticed that he does not have a criminal record.

“As the urine test proved to be negative and as I do not possess any criminal record, the officer decided to release me. He told me to seek medical treatment and to come back to lodge a police report afterwards.”

Losses of RM5,000


That afternoon, after seeking medical treatment, he went to retrieve his car from the Taming Jaya police station and noticed that the spare parts, spare battery, alternator, and tools were missing.

“I had RM1,300 in my wallet, which was given to the police, but the money is missing. My Nokia handphone and other spare parts like spark plugs are also missing. I estimate my loss to be in the range of RM5,000,” he said.

“I have lodged a police report soon as I wanted the police to investigate the matter. There are receipts for all the items at my workshop. If the items are from stolen vehicles, come and prove it to me.”

He claimed that his injuries have caused bruises all over his body, a fracture to his left leg, and slight difficulty in hearing.

Mogan said a police officer had taken photos of his injuries yesterday.

“I am scared as one of the police officers in Taming Jaya warned me that they will watch me closely. I fear for my life,” he said.

Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leader P Uthayakumar (right), who was present, said there has been a concerted effort by the authorities to pick up Indian Malaysians and to try to force confessions out of them to resolve crime.

“Hindraf does not condone crime but we are concerned if the Rela and police are going about this in such a way as to force a confession. This is illegal and worrying and we want the inspector-general of police (IGP) and the attorney-general (AG) to investigate the matter,” he said.

“For this reason, I have written to the AG and IGP today to investigate this allegation. Mogan does not have a criminal record as verified by the Kajang police but why subject him to such treatment?”

Uthayakumar said Hindraf wants to see the formation of the Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission as proposed by former Chief Justice Mohd Dzaiddin Abdullah.

Friday, February 17, 2012

JOB VACANCY


JOB VACANCY



MARKETING EXECUTIVE



MCIS ZURICH Insurance Berhad (MZ) is a composite conventional insurance provider with paid-up capital of RM100.3 million, shareholders’ fund exceeding RM315.5 million, and total assets amounting to RM4.3 billion. The Company is a product of a merger between MCIS Insurance Berhad and Zurich Insurance (M) Berhad in June 2002. For life insurance, while MZ has focused on the endowment and whole life markets in the past, its Investment-linked portfolio growth has been encouraging over the past few years.This has been supported by robust capital markets on which these funds are based on. The Company currently has 26 branches, and approximately 4250 Life and General Agents, 360,000 Policyholders and 528 Personnel nationwide. We are now expending our business in Taiping, Kuala Kangsar, Selama, Batu Kurau, Grik and surrounding are of Taiping District. We need 20 people as Marketing Executive for our expansion now.



Full Time and Part Time



Requirements ;

1.     Men and Women aged 18 years and above.

2.     Min SPM or equal with it

3.     Student who are waiting for SPM and STPM results can apply also

4.     Fresh graduates with Diploma and Degree with or without experience are encouraged to apply

5.     Have own transport

6.     Can work independently

7.     If you have working experience but without education qualification are encouraged to apply



Remuneration ;

1.     Good income with high commission (6 years commission per sale)

2.     Yearly incentive, Travelling abroad & Monthly incentive

3.     Training will be given

4.     Opportunity to have your own agency

5.     Unlimited income and can be inherited

6.     Flexible working time

7.     Fast promotion and no seniority



If you interested please come for ;



Walk in interview :

Every Monday to Friday

Time : 10.00 am to 03.00 pm

Address : Bangunan Mciszurich

                Tingkat 3, No.18,

                Jalan Long Jaafar

                34000 Taiping, Perak. Malaysia.

## Please bring your Resume when coming for interview.



Or please call for an interview appointment ;

MUHAMMAD MAGESWARAN – 012-5902894



Or you can send your Resume by email to :





Sunday, February 5, 2012

From Raja Petra's Blog ....... Read This article .... very interesting

Just the tip of the iceberg


Saturday, 04 February 2012 Super Admin 
 
When I am lying all alone in my bed at home and dying from the bitter cold and starvation I really don’t care two fucks about colours of envelopes or whether Muslims are leaving Islam to become Christians.
NO HOLDS BARRED
Raja Petra Kamarudin

60 Muslims arrested for gambling in Rembau
(Bernama) - REMBAU: Sixty Muslims who patronised a computerised gambling premises near Taboh Naning, here, were detained in a raid, early this morning.
Negeri Sembilan Islamic Religious Affairs Department (JHEAINS) operations unit chief Ahmad Zaki Hamzah said 41 computers and RM6,000 in cash were also seized in the raid.
He said those detained were aged between 20 and 60.
"They were taken to the Rembau district police headquarters to have their statements taken. They were then released on bail and will have to return on a specified date to help in investigation," he said after the raid, here, today.
Ahmad Zaki said they would be charged under Section 79 (a) of the Negri Sembilan Syariah Criminal Enactment 2004 which carries a RM3,000 fine or two years jail or both.
He said four caretakers of the premises were issued with letters ordering them to turn up at the JHEAINS enforcement unit on a specified date to help in investigations on the case.
Members of the Negeri Sembilan National Security Council and police from the State Police Contingent Headquarters also took part in the operation which started at midnight and ended at 5am.
******************************************
Widow goes from mosque to mosque for shelter
(The Star) - A HOMELESS woman has been staying in over 30 mosques in the Klang Valley for the past two years, reported Harian Metro.
The woman, known as Fazilah, said she had been taking shelter in mosques since her husband died in 2009, adding that it was safer than sleeping in corridors.
She said almost all the mosques in Kuala Lumpur and several government hospitals had become her “homes” at one time or another, adding that she had become used to the situation.
Fazilah, 59, said she lived like this because she had no means of getting enough money to support herself and her 34-year-old disabled son, who is being cared for by her sister.
“In my heart, Allah knows how hard it was for me to make that decision. I have been asking for alms and sheltering in mosques,” she said, adding that her four other children were also being cared for by her ex-husband.
She said she was trying to get a low-cost house from Kuala Lumpur City Hall with the RM500 aid from Baitulmal.
“Until then, I will keep wandering from mosque to mosque as being there calms my heart. However, I hope to get my own home one day because I don't want to burden anyone,” said the former civil servant, whose squatter house was demolished in 2002 by the Selayang Munincipal Council.
*******************************************
Bedridden woman starves to death after hubby dies
(The Star) - A 74-YEAR-OLD bedridden woman starved to death after her husband, who had been taking care of her, collapsed and died at their home in Hong Kong, China Press reported.
The retired couple had been living alone after their son moved out. However, he would return to their home to see them once in a while.
On Tuesday, the son was shocked to find his parents dead after he came back from Taiwan.
His mother's body was on the bed while her 76-year-old husband was found on the living room floor.
Police believed that the man had initially fainted but died without proper medical care. His wife starved to death a few days later.

**********************************************

Ibrahim Ali, Hasan Ali, Baba Ali, and all the sons and daughters of the Alis all over Malaysia are foaming at the mouth on what they allege are Christians trying to convert Muslims to Christianity. True or not, I really don’t know. But even if it is true, so what? If they no longer believe in Islam (or have become an atheist who no longer believes in God) that is their problem, not ours.
Actually, those who are Muslims by name only but are no longer Muslims at heart are not but a few. Many fall into that category. Of course, those who still believe in God and feel that Christianity is the correct religion would want to denounce Islam so that they can become Christians. Those who do not have the guts to do that, as they know it will attract controversy, and probably detention as well, quietly become Christians without telling even their closest family members.
How do you know how many Muslims have left Islam? By the couple of thousands who have applied to the National Registration Department to change their Muslim names to Christian names? By the ten or twenty who attend ‘Christian events’? Or by the millions who no longer live the adeen (lifestyle or ‘way’) of Islam?
If a Muslim is defined by his or her lifestyle, then there are a very few Muslims left in Malaysia. Islam has to be about akidah. And if you do not have akidah you are not a Muslim, never mind if you were born into a Muslim family and carry a Muslim name on your identity card. You can’t be born a Muslim. You can’t be a Muslim in name. You have to be a Muslim at heart.
And in that spirit there are very few Muslims left in Malaysia. And if I need to explain to you what a Muslim at heart means, send me your bank account details and I will send you enough money to buy a gun so that you can shoot your brains out.
I have been detained in police lockups. I have been to prison. And the people I meet inside those places are ‘Muslims’, the majority of them. Some, such as rapists, even wear white skullcaps and never miss their five-times a day prayers.
Why worry about ex-Muslims who no longer believe in Islam and wish to leave Islam or wish to become Christians? What about those ‘true’ Muslims who never miss their fasting or prayers but who violate every Islamic rule in the book?
Why are Muslims so preoccupied with numbers? This is not a numbers game. This is not about which religion can attract the most number of followers. It should be about the quality of the practitioners. And that is one thing that Islam lacks, Muslims of quality who live the adeen of Islam.
Cock fighting is a favourite pastime in the Malay-Muslim heartland of Terengganu and Kelantan. Cock fighting is basically gambling. AIDS is critical in Kelantan. The drug problem is critical in Terengganu. And so on and so forth. And the majority under detention and in prison are Malays-Muslims.
Okay, while we wait for the Malay-Islam-bashing to start, as it always does, read the other news reports above. Read about the 59-year-old Malay-Muslim woman who for almost three years has to move from mosque to mosque just to have a roof over her head.
What are those rich Malays-Muslims who live in places like Damansara, Bangsar and Taman Tun and who own RM20 million apartments in London doing about this? Why must things like this happen in today’s day and age?
Then read about an old Chinese couple in Hongkong dying without their children even knowing about it. Sure, it is Chinese culture NOT to give out money in white envelopes. Is it Chinese culture to let your parents die of starvation?
Anyway, don’t feel too bad about it. This also happens in the UK. It also happens in America. There are 100,000 homeless HOUSEHOLDS in the UK. In America it is 500,000.
We are now experiencing a very cold winter. Since yesterday we have been seeing ice in the UK. Tonight it is going to snow and we are expecting below zero temperatures. The government has just announced that many homeless people and old people living alone are going to die of cold. By this weekend the mortuaries are going to be full.
All this talk about Islam and Chinese culture disgusts me. Why not we talk about how to be good Muslims rather than how to prevent Muslims from leaving Islam? Why not we talk about how to help the homeless and old folks living alone who are going to die over the next 48 hours because they are being neglected rather than whether the envelope should be white, red, green or pink?
When I am lying all alone in my bed at home and dying from the bitter cold and starvation I really don’t care two fucks about colours of envelopes or whether Muslims are leaving Islam to become Christians.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

You Going Lose your Vote

If you read the article (look down there) , its show that how much stupid UMNO are. By saying this they going to lose a huge amount of VOTE…..

They are digging their own grave ……

………………………………………………………………………………………

All DAP supporters are 'bangsat', says delegate

Malaysiakini.com    by Hafiz Yatim 5:44PM Nov 30, 2011

Umno Youth delegates took turns to bash Pakatan Rakyat for administrative ‘weaknesses’ in the four states it governs, and warned that the situation must be prevented from worsening. Read more at malaysiakini.com

Monday, November 21, 2011

Hey!!!! Bro, every human has rights and please look at a BIGGER Picture....


This man only cares about:

1.       Man fuck man

2.       Ass (Jubuk) fucking

3.       Dick play dick

4.       Dick fuck pussy

5.       Pussy on top of dick

6.       Pussy fuck pussy

7.       Women fuck women

8.       Man in lady dress (pondan)

9.       Woman in man dress (tomboy)

10.   Close intimates without wedlock

11.   Fucking without wedlock

12.   How other people fuck

13.   Lesbians

14.   Gays

15.   Bisexuals

16.   Transsexuals

17.   Sex party

18.   Nude party

19.   Swing party

20.   Dick sucking

21.   Pussy licking

22.   Ass (Jubuk) licking

23.   Sex seminar

24.   Sex education

25.   Sex festival

26.   Sex laws

27.   Interracial sex

28.   Group sex

29.   Swinger

30.   Everything about sex la…… lots more …. U pikirlah sendiri

 Hey!! Bro why not you talk about corruption and human rights. That’s already very big topic. You can talk about this whole day, whole week, whole month, whole year and until you die. You just can’t finish the topic. It will make our country to grow and prosperous more….. every day sex …. every day sex..... every day sex .....  Fuck you la ….

You can read the article from Malaysia Insider below, then u will understand what i'm saying...…..

Ayoyo bro minister ….. Whatever it is, my…

Life goes on …… ha ha ha
..............................................................................................

Minister says being gay is unconstitutional

By Shazwan Mustafa Kamal November 21, 2011 Malaysian Insider
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 21 — A federal minister said today it is unconstitutional for a person to be homosexual in Malaysia, but did not back up his claims with any provision.

There are no provisions in the federal constitution which directly mention the sexual preference of individuals. Minister in the  Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Jamil Khir Baharom (picture) however cited sections 377(a), (b), (c) and (d) of the Penal Code to justify his argument.

The sections relate to carnal intercourse against the order of nature. “In reality, in the country’s constitution it is not allowed, including sections 377(a), (b), (c) and (d) which prohibit sexual relations between two men,” said Jamil, who is in charge of Islamic affairs and head of the Malaysian Department of Islamic Development (Jakim).

Jamil’s remarks were in response to a question about the banned “Seksualiti Merdeka” event, during an interview with Umno-owned Utusan Malaysia.

The minister said Malaysians had a responsibility to unite and stop any promotion of homosexual, lesbian or bisexual practices.

Jamil said his understanding of the event was that its organizers wanted “freedom” of sexual orientation for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transsexuals (LGBT).

“This is a deviation from society’s norms. We should help them go back to the right path, not acknowledge their practices,” he added.

Gay rights were a hotly debated topic here recently after a police clampdown saw organisers of Seksualiti Merdeka call off the festival early this month.

Seksualiti Merdeka, a movement championing the freedom of sexual orientation and gender identity, was banned by authorities despite having held its festival annually since 2008.

Human rights activists, including Datuk Paduka Marina Mahathir, lashed out at media reports describing the event as a “free sex festival”, and threatened to sue if the matter was not clarified.

Four other activists, including electoral reform movement Bersih 2.0 chairman Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan, were also questioned by police over their involvement in the festival that outraged several Muslim groups.