Showing posts with label English. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Raja Petra teams up with WikiLeaks' Assange

Malaysia Today, the online portal run by self-exiled blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin, has teamed up with world renowned whistle blower website WikiLeaks run by Julian Assange.

READY TO ROCK ... The whistleblowing duo Assange and Petra marking the 'smart' partnership at the Duke of York, Surrey, UK

Marking their cooperation, Petra and the Australian-born Assange signed a Memorandum of Understanding in a simple ceremony in London yesterday.

Launched in 2006, WikiLeaks, which made world headlines over its exposure of US documents in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, specialises in the publication of private, secret, and classified media from anonymous news sources, news leaks, and whistleblowers.

In February, amid revelation of diplomatic cables embarrassing governments across continents, Assange, who in 2009 was awarded Amnesty International's Media Award, appealed against a decision by a court in UK to have him extradited to Sweden to face charges related to sex crimes, which he has denied.

Petra's own whistleblower website meanwhile has been no less controversial, rocking Malaysian politics with its publication of confidential documents exposing everything from corrupt low-level civil servants to an alleged involvement of the prime minister's wife in a murder case.

Only recently, Petra granted an interview to UMNO-owned station TV3, urging authorities to investigate a statutory declaration claiming that Rosmah Mansor, the prime minister's wife, had been personally involved in the brutal murder of Mongolian agent Altantuya Shariibuu in November 2006. -HD

Sunday, 10 April 2011

Gulf Arab plan would see president quit

A protester injured in clashes on Saturday night in Sanaa is treated in hospital, 10 April Yemen's embattled leader would resign and hand over to his deputy in return for guarantees of protection, under a plan drawn up by Gulf Arab mediators.

Details of the plan to end escalating unrest in Yemen, where President Ali Abdullah Saleh has been in power for three decades, were leaked to the BBC.

The plan foresees an interim government being formed to oversee elections.

But with Mr Saleh's position ambiguous, any resolution still seems far off, a BBC correspondent reports from Yemen.

In theory, Mr Saleh has agreed to resign but he has also repeatedly said that he cannot abandon his people.

Mr Saleh had welcomed the Gulf Co-operation Council's (GCC) offer of mediation, then dismissed it, then welcomed it again, our correspondent says.

A diplomat in the Yemeni capital Sanaa says these mixed messages are a clear sign that Mr Saleh does not want to step down.

'Exit negotiations'

The GCC plan sees Mr Saleh handing powers to his vice-president in return for "guarantees of protection" for both the president and his family.
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All sides are putting the country at risk of civil war and they need to come to an agreement not in days, but in hours”

Abdel Ghani al Iriyani Political analyst based in Sanaa

The new interim government would be formed from "all streams of the Yemeni nation".

Arab states would mediate, work out details and eventually fly Yemen's leaders to Riyadh to sign the deal.

Some believe the GCC initiative has already been seriously crippled by President Saleh's dismissive remarks about it, our correspondent says.

Others are more optimistic and say he is simply trying to negotiate the best possible exit, and the best possible security guarantees for his family members, many of whom hold powerful positions and are reported to be putting pressure on him to stay.

"All sides are putting the country at risk of civil war and they need to come to an agreement not in days, but in hours," says Abdel Ghani al Iriyani, a political analyst based in Sanaa.

"We have tanks facing the streets of Sanaa, the situation is becoming increasingly hard to control."

On Sunday, GCC foreign ministers plan to hold an extraordinary meeting in Riyadh to discuss developments in Yemen and the prospects of a dialogue.

Many in Yemen fear that unless the sides come to the negotiating table soon, the window of opportunity for a peaceful solution will close.