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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Misteri seorang CEO

Aku tertarik dengan satu artikel mengenai seseorang yang misteri kewujudannya.

Nama nya John Pang. Siapa dia sebenarnya?

SID?
SB?
ATCK?
CIA?
MOSSAD?..
ILLUMINATI?
Rakyat Malaysia.. yang pandai...cari makann..

Artikel-artikel dibawah ini mengaitkan John Pang dengan semua yang disebut diatas.

Agak-agaknya yang mana satu?..

Lagi satu persoalan ialah dari pemahaman undang-undang tentera (Military law), aku betul-betul tak faham kesalahan apakah yang telah dilakukan oleh Timbalan Pengarah Perisikan Col. Azmi
?

Jika kesalahan hanya memfitnah Najib dan bini nya, Kolonel ini yang berasal dari Unit Kejuruteraan dan dipungut ke Unit Perisikan harus dihadapkan ke mahkamah sivil. Biar Polis Raja DiMalaysia buat siasatan.

Tapi mengapa
Board Of Inquiry (BOI) Angkatan Tentera pula yang terlibat? Atau maklumat yang dibocorkan bukan hanya berkisar pembunuhan altantuya tapi lebih dari itu?


Dipetik dari: Malaysia Today.

PETALING JAYA: Controversial blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin today revealed that there was a plot engineered so that veteran Umno leader Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah can take over as prime minister from Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

“The objective was to block Najib Tun Razak from taking over as prime minister,” said Raja Petra, better known as RPK, in his website Malaysia Today in a follow-up to an interview which was broadcast on TV3 yesterday.

“If Abdullah Ahmad Badawi can be forced to resign and if Najib is blocked from taking over, then Tengku Razaleigh (Ku Li) could become the next prime minister.

“A meeting was held in Tengku Razaleigh’s office. About 30 people, including several Umno bloggers such as Big Dog were also there. PKR people like Adlan Benan Omar and Rafizi Ramli also came.

“Many others whom you will know if I mention their names also attended (I will leave it to them whether they want to surface, but they know who I’m talking about),” he wrote in an article titled ‘Now that the shit has hit the fan’.

“The purpose of this meeting was to explore how it can be engineered so that Tengku Razaleigh can take over as prime minister.

“My friend Nik Azmi Nik Daud alias Bul was the ‘main speaker’ with all the ideas on how this can be achieved.”

Raja Petra, fondly known as RPK, said that one way to stop Najib from assuming the premiership was by linking him to the Altantuya murder.

He added that the reports he wrote on Malaysia Today, alleging Najib and Rosmah Mansor were involved in the death of Mongolian model-translator Altantuyaa Shaarriibuu was based on intelligence reports by Lieutenant Colonel (Lt Col) Azmi Zainal Abidin, the No 2 man in military intelligence.

However Raja Petra said he never got hold of the report but based his article after his friend Nik Azmi vouched for Azmi. Raja Petra subsequently named Azmi in a statutory declaration he made in June 2008.
The media, said Raja Petra, only highlighted that he had made a statutory declaration against Rosmah and two others, Lt Cols Aziz Buyong and Norhayati Hassan even though that was not case.

“Most seem to not understand that I did not make any allegation against Rosmah or the two Lt Cols. I made only an allegation against Lt Col Azmi Zainal Abidin, the number two in the special branch of the military intelligence.”

‘Sources became turncoats’

Raja Petra revaled that he first heard of Azmi via his friend, Nik Azmi alias Bul.

“Bul then related that Lt Col Azmi Zainal has a confidential report that proved that Rosmah, Lt Col Aziz Buyong, and his wife, Lt Col Norhayati Hassan, were present at the scene of Altantuya’s murder at the time she was murdered. Bul told me to expose this.”

Raja Petra then contacted Tengku Razaleigh’s aide, John Pang for verifications of these allegations.
“John confirmed that Tengku Razaleigh knew Lt Col Azmi well and that he visited Tengku Razaleigh’s office often. He also said that Tengku Razaleigh also knew about the story of this confidential military intelligence report about Rosmah and the two Lt Cols being at the scene of the crime.”

Unfortunately, said Raja Petra, both Pang and Nik Azmi have now become Najib supporters.
“Today, Bul declares that he is a strong Najib supporter and that he has always supported Najib from way back. Suddenly he is no longer the man who was scheming on how to block Najib from taking over so that Tengku Razaleigh can be the new prime minister.

“Bul, who promised me that he will make sure I will never go to jail and that the military intelligence report would surface the instant the police come for me, today tells me that the report no longer exists.”

“John Pang, however, is now with CIMB Jakarta and we all know who owns CIMB,” added Raja Petra. CIMB is owned by Nazir Razak, the Prime Minister’s brother.

Similarly Din Merican, a blogger who spoke to Anwar Ibrahim about the matter, and assured Raja Petra that Azmi as very reliable source, has washed his hands off after being disillusioned by PKR.

Yesterday Raja Petra’s recorded interview with TV3 focused on his statutory declaration. Part two of the interview will be aired today.

Raja Petra’s article


Dipetik dari: The star online

But there is also need for greater integration and government reforms

KUALA LUMPUR: Asean needs to work towards greater integration and reforms of their governments to really become a force to be reckoned with in the global economy.

At the Second Annual Young Corporate Malaysians Summit 2010 held over the weekend, panelists, who comprised industry leaders from the region, agreed that there were huge opportunities available in Asean for investors to tap.

But at the same time, there were also huge challenges that governments need to address. We're in a truly landscape-changing environment. There are huge opportunities here, as the region has become the centre of gravity for the global economy, CIMB Asean Research Institute chief executive officer John Pang said.
Among the various opportunities in the region that panelists highlighted include those focused on natural resources, infrastructure and Islamic banking sectors.

John Pang ... ‘The key challenge that Asean faces at the moment is the lack of managerial talent among its people.’

Of the countries in Asean, Indonesia was largely seen as the next big thing in the region. Driven by its huge domestic market, Indonesia's economy, which is also the largest in the region, was among the very few in the world that still registered positive growth during the onslaught of the global financial crisis.

Last year, it posted a gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 4.5%. This year, Indonesia is expected to chart a 6% growth rate.

Next year, the country's GDP growth is expected to exceed 6%. This makes Indonesia among the fastest-growing economies in Asia after China and India.

Indonesia is definitely a country to watch, and it is definitely attracting a lot of foreign direct investments (FDIs), PT Macquarie Capital Securities of Indonesia research head Ferry Wong said during his session.
He said that the present political stability in the country, with President Dr Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's party enjoying strong parliamentary support, meant that the Government had ensured capacity to push through various reforms that would make Indonesia more attractive.

Reforms are necessary, not only in Indonesia, but in all other countries in Asean, including Malaysia, if the region were to be in a much stronger position globally, Rothschild Investment Bank Singapore managing director Dr Peter Bird pointed out in his session.

Unfortunately, foreign investors in general tend to perceive that governments in Asean, safe for Singapore, were incapable of putting their ideas into practice.

You can rule Singapore out of this. The country has been run very efficiently and effectively and it is generally perceived to be clean' and transparent', Bird said.

But for others, he said earnest desire for reforms had to be demonstrated through quick execution of plans to change investors' poor perception of their economies.

Over the years, the lack of governments' will power to execute plans had been one of the main complaints among foreign businesses wanting to invest in the region.

Other grouses included the undue political influence in business dealings, the direct involvement of governments in business, poor infrastructure, corruption and corporate governance. Investors don't like these because they create uncertainties, Bird said.

Corston-Smith Asset Management Sdn Bhd founder and principal fund manager Shireen Muhiudeen echoed the same sentiment.

She urged economic stakeholders to take the initiative to exercise proper governance in their companies to change corporate Malaysia and corporate Asean. She said independent directors were important as a system of check and balance in companies.

At the end of the day, integrity is something that no one can take away from you, she emphasised, as she encouraged young participants at the summit to instill good values when they become leaders of tomorrow.
According to Bird, Asean's main selling point was its people. CIMB's Pang concurred, but he said, the key challenge that Asean faces at the moment is the lack of managerial talent among its people.

We, therefore, need to create a new class of corporate talent with a different mindset, who sees themselves as professionals based not merely in their own country, but in the region as a whole, Pang added.
Panellists at the summit agreed that countries in the region should strive to break down barriers and bridge cultural divides so that the region can be more integrated with one another.

The summit was organised by a locally established group called the Young Corporate Malaysians.
The main sponsors included StarBiz, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Brunsfield, CIMB Group, Danga Bay, Weida, 1MDB and Insitute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales

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