British Petroleum's Deepwater Horizon oil rig goes up in flames on 20 April 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico (pic by Reuters)
Dick Cheney responsible for biggest oil spill in history?
The explosion that destroyed BP's Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico on 20 April 2010. killing at least 11, has resulted in what has been described as the worst oil spill in history.
Just to save $500,000 on a safety feature called the acoustic switch, BP is now being held accountable for a massive environmental hazard that might eventually cost more than $14 billion in losses. No cash value can measure the distress to humans and the ecosystem this avoidable oil spill will cause.
This catastrophe graphically illustrates the long-term dangers of shooting for short-term gains in a climate of entrenched corporate and bureaucratic corruption.
America is now suffering the grievous effects of having tolerated George W. Bush as president for eight years and allowing his vice-president, Dick Cheney, free rein as Wheeler-Dealer-in-Chief.
Malaysians, be warned! Endemic environmental ruin and operational inefficiency resulting from 53 years of Umno/BN mismanagement will most certainly devastate our fragile economy and burden our descendants with a very hefty national debt.
Read the hard-hitting article below by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr and you will reassess your support for the corrupt status quo!
Sex, Lies and Oil Spills
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
A common spin in the right wing coverage of BP's oil spill is a gleeful suggestion that the gulf blowout is Obama's Katrina.
In truth, culpability for the disaster can more accurately be laid at the Bush Administration's doorstep. For eight years, George Bush's presidency infected the oil industry's oversight agency, the Minerals Management Service, with a septic culture of corruption from which it has yet to recover. Oil patch alumnae in the White House encouraged agency personnel to engineer weakened safeguards that directly contributed to the gulf catastrophe.
The absence of an acoustical regulator - a remotely triggered dead man's switch that might have closed off BP's gushing pipe at its sea floor wellhead when the manual switch failed (the fire and explosion on the drilling platform may have prevented the dying workers from pushing the button) - was directly attributable to industry pandering by the Bush team.
Acoustic switches are required by law for all offshore rigs off Brazil and in Norway's North Sea operations. BP uses the devise voluntarily in Britain's North Sea and elsewhere in the world as do other big players like Holland's Shell and France's Total.
In 2000, the Minerals Management Service while weighing a comprehensive rulemaking for drilling safety, deemed the acoustic mechanism "essential" and proposed to mandate the mechanism on all gulf rigs. Then, between January and March of 2001, incoming Vice President Dick Cheney conducted secret meetings with over 100 oil industry officials allowing them to draft a wish list of industry demands to be implemented by the oil friendly administration. Cheney also used that time to re-staff the Minerals Management Service with oil industry toadies including a cabal of his Wyoming carbon cronies.
In 2003, newly reconstituted Minerals Management Service genuflected to the oil cartel by recommending the removal of the proposed requirement for acoustic switches. The Minerals Management Service's 2003 study concluded that "acoustic systems are not recommended because they tend to be very costly." The acoustic trigger costs about $500,000. Estimated costs of the oil spill to Gulf Coast residents are now upward of $14 billion to gulf state communities.
Bush's 2005 energy bill officially dropped the requirement for the acoustic switch off devices explaining that the industry's existing practices are "failsafe." Bending over for Big Oil became the ideological posture of the Bush White House, and, under Cheney's cruel whip, the practice trickled down through the regulatory bureaucracy. The Minerals Management Service - the poster child for "agency capture phenomena" - hopped into bed with the regulated industry - literally.
A 2009 investigation of the Minerals Management Service found that agency officials "frequently consumed alcohol at industry functions, had used cocaine and marijuana and had sexual relationships with oil and gas company representatives." Three reports by the Inspector General describe an open bazaar of payoffs, bribes and kickbacks spiced with scenes of female employees providing sexual favors to industry big wigs who in turn rewarded government workers with illegal contracts.
In one incident reported by the Inspector General, agency employees got so drunk at a Shell sponsored golf event that they could not drive home and had to sleep in hotel rooms paid for by Shell. Pervasive intercourse also characterized their financial relations. Industry lobbyists underwrote lavish parties and showered agency employees with illegal gifts, and lucrative personal contracts and treated them to regular golf, ski, and paintball outings, trips to rock concerts and professional sports events. The Inspector General characterized this orgy of wheeling and dealing as "a culture of ethical failure" that cost taxpayers millions in royalty fees and produced reams of bad science to justify unregulated deep water drilling in the gulf.
[Read the whole sordid story here.]
US government assumes control of clean-up in Gulf of Mexico as £13bn wiped off BP's value
Saturday, May 8, 2010
CORRUPTION KILLS!
Labels:
BP,
Deepwater Horizon,
Dick Cheney,
Gulf of Mexico,
Halliburton
Thursday, May 6, 2010
I have a 14-year-old son too...
And that's why I have a personal stake in ensuring that never again must the police force be allowed to deteriorate into a goon squad serving the petty interests of a rogue regime. Below are two important items lifted from Free Malaysia Today (which is fast gaining credibility and stature as an alternative news portal)...
The arrogance of police power
Wed, 05 May 2010 15:08
A week after schoolboy Aminulrasyid Amzah's death by police shooting, Malaysians have been treated to the ghastly spectacle of a government withdrawing into itself in the face of public outrage, and seemingly intent only on finding grounds for justifying its actions.
Left in abeyance is the fact that governments exist in democratic nations to ensure the safety of all its citizens, and to ensure equal justice for all, no matter what their station in life.
Aminul is dead, at the age of 15, after a late-night caper. Under normal circumstances, he would have faced punishment from his parents. Instead he was, in effect, served the death penalty in appallingly suspicious circumstances.
The Malaysian public is justifiably angry and upset. Justice must be served in dealing with how Aminul died — not just for his sake, but also for the sake of all citizens who need reassurance, in no uncertain terms, that they are safe from their own guardians.
It is at times like these that a democratically-elected government rises to the occasion and acts in the larger interests of everyone.
Instead, for the past week, the image that emerged is of an uncaring police force intent on protecting its reputation and its manliless, aggressively demanding that its word is accepted at face value without question.
If that is not the image they sought to build, the Inspector-General of Police and the Selangor police chief only have themselves to blame.
Musa Hassan (above, right) made a childish threat to keep the police force in barracks, aggressively showed he expected unquestioning acceptance of the policemen's own accounts, then tried to pin on a dead boy and his family any responsibility for the circumstances that led to his death, in between keeping up a plaintive pleading for the public to be fair to his men.
It is no wonder that many demanded that he leave immediately and not wait for his contract to expire.
Khalid Abu Bakar (left) also insisted that the public should believe his policemen's story and showed a callous willingness to label a schoolboy a criminal on the unproven assertion that a parang was found in his car, and arrogantly threatened politicians who took up the issue and questioned police accounts.
It is no wonder that questions are asked whether he considers himself a policeman, an officer of the law, or is really a politician.
[Read the whole of this superb editorial here.]
Open letter to Najib
Thu, 06 May 2010 12:11
Below is an open letter to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, penned by Amnesty International Canada's coordinator for Malaysia and Singapore, Margaret John. She expresses concern over Anwar Ibrahim's sodomy trial.
Dear Prime Minister,
I write with respect in order to inform you about high-level concern in Canada regarding Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim and to request your urgent intervention.
As you must be aware, there is worldwide concern about events relating to this prominent opposition leader’s current situation, thus putting a critical spotlight on Malaysia. As prime minister, you are undoubtedly concerned, for example, that the respected Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) recently declared that Anwar’s current trial on a charge of sodomy is riddled with defects.
The IPU has now made a decision to send an observer to the coming court hearings. The United States of America expressed its intention to continue to scrutinise this controversial trial.
Hundreds of participants, including former Canadian prime minister Kim Campbell, at the World Movement for Democracy, signed a petition calling for a fair trial as well as for the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar . Further, some 50 Australian parliamentarians recently signed a letter calling for an end to the ongoing sodomy trial.
Joining the international outcry, concern is increasingly expressed at a high level in Canada . Please see enclosed documents. In brief:
Officers of the Canadian High Commission in Kuala Lumpur remain in private and public contact with Anwar and have observed the trial proceedings with great interest.
In a Globe and Mail article, former Canadian Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Paul Martin called for the charges to be dropped to enable Anwar Ibrahim to “pursue his vision of a democratic Malaysia, properly respectful of human rights.”
Opposition Liberal Party Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Bob Rae MP, called on Canada’s Parliament to take note of continuing political and legal harassment of Anwar, who has “long been a compelling spokesperson for democracy and for human rights in his country, and despite an unjustified prison sentence continues to speak out with courage and with determination.”
[Read the rest here.]
The arrogance of police power
Wed, 05 May 2010 15:08
A week after schoolboy Aminulrasyid Amzah's death by police shooting, Malaysians have been treated to the ghastly spectacle of a government withdrawing into itself in the face of public outrage, and seemingly intent only on finding grounds for justifying its actions.
Left in abeyance is the fact that governments exist in democratic nations to ensure the safety of all its citizens, and to ensure equal justice for all, no matter what their station in life.
Aminul is dead, at the age of 15, after a late-night caper. Under normal circumstances, he would have faced punishment from his parents. Instead he was, in effect, served the death penalty in appallingly suspicious circumstances.
The Malaysian public is justifiably angry and upset. Justice must be served in dealing with how Aminul died — not just for his sake, but also for the sake of all citizens who need reassurance, in no uncertain terms, that they are safe from their own guardians.
It is at times like these that a democratically-elected government rises to the occasion and acts in the larger interests of everyone.
Instead, for the past week, the image that emerged is of an uncaring police force intent on protecting its reputation and its manliless, aggressively demanding that its word is accepted at face value without question.
If that is not the image they sought to build, the Inspector-General of Police and the Selangor police chief only have themselves to blame.
Musa Hassan (above, right) made a childish threat to keep the police force in barracks, aggressively showed he expected unquestioning acceptance of the policemen's own accounts, then tried to pin on a dead boy and his family any responsibility for the circumstances that led to his death, in between keeping up a plaintive pleading for the public to be fair to his men.
It is no wonder that many demanded that he leave immediately and not wait for his contract to expire.
Khalid Abu Bakar (left) also insisted that the public should believe his policemen's story and showed a callous willingness to label a schoolboy a criminal on the unproven assertion that a parang was found in his car, and arrogantly threatened politicians who took up the issue and questioned police accounts.
It is no wonder that questions are asked whether he considers himself a policeman, an officer of the law, or is really a politician.
[Read the whole of this superb editorial here.]
Open letter to Najib
Thu, 06 May 2010 12:11
Below is an open letter to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, penned by Amnesty International Canada's coordinator for Malaysia and Singapore, Margaret John. She expresses concern over Anwar Ibrahim's sodomy trial.
Dear Prime Minister,
I write with respect in order to inform you about high-level concern in Canada regarding Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim and to request your urgent intervention.
As you must be aware, there is worldwide concern about events relating to this prominent opposition leader’s current situation, thus putting a critical spotlight on Malaysia. As prime minister, you are undoubtedly concerned, for example, that the respected Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) recently declared that Anwar’s current trial on a charge of sodomy is riddled with defects.
The IPU has now made a decision to send an observer to the coming court hearings. The United States of America expressed its intention to continue to scrutinise this controversial trial.
Hundreds of participants, including former Canadian prime minister Kim Campbell, at the World Movement for Democracy, signed a petition calling for a fair trial as well as for the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar . Further, some 50 Australian parliamentarians recently signed a letter calling for an end to the ongoing sodomy trial.
Joining the international outcry, concern is increasingly expressed at a high level in Canada . Please see enclosed documents. In brief:
Officers of the Canadian High Commission in Kuala Lumpur remain in private and public contact with Anwar and have observed the trial proceedings with great interest.
In a Globe and Mail article, former Canadian Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Paul Martin called for the charges to be dropped to enable Anwar Ibrahim to “pursue his vision of a democratic Malaysia, properly respectful of human rights.”
Opposition Liberal Party Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Bob Rae MP, called on Canada’s Parliament to take note of continuing political and legal harassment of Anwar, who has “long been a compelling spokesperson for democracy and for human rights in his country, and despite an unjustified prison sentence continues to speak out with courage and with determination.”
[Read the rest here.]
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
DINOSAUR DYNASTIES & THE DINOSAUR TECHNOLOGIES THEY FOIST ON US (reprise)
I read this letter in Malaysiakini from "Malaysian with Children" with profound disgust and outrage at the way Barisan Nasional is leading the nation straight to hell with their myopic, greed-driven, environmentally and morally ruinous schemes...
MALAYSIA GOING NUCLEAR FRAUGHT WITH DANGER
Malaysian with Children
Aug 24, 2009 3:31pm
The sun has been the main energy source for all life on the planet for billions of years. In Malaysia, we are blessed with a bounty of sunlight.
Yet, our Malaysian government is pushing for nuclear energy as though it is the best and only option for Malaysia's future energy needs.
The government seems to be brushing aside the dangers relating to nuclear power plants, as if they were issues that didn't exist or could easily be remedied in the near future.
Developed countries are having serious difficulties with their own nuclear programmes. In the US, there are problems disposing of nuclear reactor waste.
In Finland, construction of nuclear power plants have been delayed and gone way over cost due to shoddy work on the concrete foundations.
What more of the situation in Malaysia, where we tend to have even less oversight in commercial dealings? Where is the safety or economic sense in all that?
From what I have seen, there is no detailed information available to the public on Malaysia's nuclear plans. Where will the reactor be located - maybe in Ipoh, or maybe Putrajaya?
What type of reactor will it be? Who will we buy the uranium to run the reactor from? How much will it all cost and who is paying for it?
If those weren't enough questions, what about the waste generated from our nuclear power plant - where and how Malaysia will be dealing with its own nuclear reactor waste - waste that remains highly radioactive for thousands of years?
Will we dump it in deep geological recesses off our coasts? Will we bury it in the jungles of Sarawak, Sabah or Pahang? Will we be reprocessing it in factories in Miri or in Kota Baru?
The world got into the mess of climate change and global warming because we went the quick, easy and convenient way.
We did not look at the long-term consequences of burning fossil fuels, perhaps because in the beginning, we didn't really know the consequences.
Our oceans and rivers are now choking on plastic pollution, because we needed cheap and lightweight material for packaging.
But we do know, right now, that nuclear energy will produce highly radioactive waste, even if it is in small amounts, every day a nuclear plant is open.
We do know, right now, that this highly radioactive waste must be disposed of somewhere on our finite planet. We do know, right now, that we have no technology to make this waste safe.
And as more countries build nuclear power plants, more of this waste is dumped into our Earth, the planet that sustains our lives.
It is unforgivable that we, as governments and responsible adults, knowingly create such dangerous waste without a concern for tomorrow.
We are already leaving our children with our legacy of global warming, and choking pollution.
And now we wish to leave this massive mess of nuclear waste and closed reactor sites to our grandchildren, leaving them with the burden of trying to figure out how to solve the problem that we ourselves have no idea how to solve.
I know I'm afraid, very afraid.
Here's an eminently sensible letter in response...
SOLAR ENERGY A BETTER ALTERNATIVE
Hai Hiung
Aug 26, 2009 4:03pm
I'm writing in regards to the following letter: "Malaysia going nuclear fraught with danger." I agree with the author, Malaysian with Children.
For reasons unbeknownst to most of us ordinary folk, TNB is pushing hard for the use of nuclear energy for generating electricity. The studies they used to justify going nuclear is biased.
First, they used South Korea as their case in point. South Korea is nothing like Malaysia in terms of the availability of solar energy.
In a year, South Korea would probably enjoy less than six months of effective sunlight for solar energy generation, compared to Malaysia's year-round sunshine.
Secondly, the cost cited by nuclear experts is inaccurate at best. In my opinion, TNB has been ill-advised on the cost of security.
The cost of guarding the nuclear plant itself could easily outweigh the cost of operation and the cost of nuclear waste disposal.
Even though Malaysia is relatively safe from terror attacks, there is no guarantee that terrorists would not target Malaysia in the future.
Having a nuclear plant sitting on Malaysian soil makes us that much more vulnerable to terrorism.
Third, the justification that by the time the plant is opened, we should have proper maintainance procedures in place.
We still don't have a good track record where that is concerned if you see how TNB and our public trains are concerned.
Fourth, First Solar recently opened a RM2bil plant in Kulim. So, we actually have a solar panel manufacturer here on our shore.
Yet, it never occurred to TNB to approach First Solar to setup a solar power plant.
If France, a Mediterranean country, finds using solar energy good enough to be part of its energy-generation needs, then we must ask TNB - why can't Malaysia do the same?
These are the so-called Master Bloodlines that have utterly misunderstood the meaning of Mastery. They measure the power of a Master by the number of Slaves at his command. Little do they realize that a TRUE MASTER is master only of his own destiny and the way he responds to his environment.
MALAYSIA GOING NUCLEAR FRAUGHT WITH DANGER
Malaysian with Children
Aug 24, 2009 3:31pm
The sun has been the main energy source for all life on the planet for billions of years. In Malaysia, we are blessed with a bounty of sunlight.
Yet, our Malaysian government is pushing for nuclear energy as though it is the best and only option for Malaysia's future energy needs.
The government seems to be brushing aside the dangers relating to nuclear power plants, as if they were issues that didn't exist or could easily be remedied in the near future.
Developed countries are having serious difficulties with their own nuclear programmes. In the US, there are problems disposing of nuclear reactor waste.
In Finland, construction of nuclear power plants have been delayed and gone way over cost due to shoddy work on the concrete foundations.
What more of the situation in Malaysia, where we tend to have even less oversight in commercial dealings? Where is the safety or economic sense in all that?
From what I have seen, there is no detailed information available to the public on Malaysia's nuclear plans. Where will the reactor be located - maybe in Ipoh, or maybe Putrajaya?
What type of reactor will it be? Who will we buy the uranium to run the reactor from? How much will it all cost and who is paying for it?
If those weren't enough questions, what about the waste generated from our nuclear power plant - where and how Malaysia will be dealing with its own nuclear reactor waste - waste that remains highly radioactive for thousands of years?
Will we dump it in deep geological recesses off our coasts? Will we bury it in the jungles of Sarawak, Sabah or Pahang? Will we be reprocessing it in factories in Miri or in Kota Baru?
The world got into the mess of climate change and global warming because we went the quick, easy and convenient way.
We did not look at the long-term consequences of burning fossil fuels, perhaps because in the beginning, we didn't really know the consequences.
Our oceans and rivers are now choking on plastic pollution, because we needed cheap and lightweight material for packaging.
But we do know, right now, that nuclear energy will produce highly radioactive waste, even if it is in small amounts, every day a nuclear plant is open.
We do know, right now, that this highly radioactive waste must be disposed of somewhere on our finite planet. We do know, right now, that we have no technology to make this waste safe.
And as more countries build nuclear power plants, more of this waste is dumped into our Earth, the planet that sustains our lives.
It is unforgivable that we, as governments and responsible adults, knowingly create such dangerous waste without a concern for tomorrow.
We are already leaving our children with our legacy of global warming, and choking pollution.
And now we wish to leave this massive mess of nuclear waste and closed reactor sites to our grandchildren, leaving them with the burden of trying to figure out how to solve the problem that we ourselves have no idea how to solve.
I know I'm afraid, very afraid.
Here's an eminently sensible letter in response...
SOLAR ENERGY A BETTER ALTERNATIVE
Hai Hiung
Aug 26, 2009 4:03pm
I'm writing in regards to the following letter: "Malaysia going nuclear fraught with danger." I agree with the author, Malaysian with Children.
For reasons unbeknownst to most of us ordinary folk, TNB is pushing hard for the use of nuclear energy for generating electricity. The studies they used to justify going nuclear is biased.
First, they used South Korea as their case in point. South Korea is nothing like Malaysia in terms of the availability of solar energy.
In a year, South Korea would probably enjoy less than six months of effective sunlight for solar energy generation, compared to Malaysia's year-round sunshine.
Secondly, the cost cited by nuclear experts is inaccurate at best. In my opinion, TNB has been ill-advised on the cost of security.
The cost of guarding the nuclear plant itself could easily outweigh the cost of operation and the cost of nuclear waste disposal.
Even though Malaysia is relatively safe from terror attacks, there is no guarantee that terrorists would not target Malaysia in the future.
Having a nuclear plant sitting on Malaysian soil makes us that much more vulnerable to terrorism.
Third, the justification that by the time the plant is opened, we should have proper maintainance procedures in place.
We still don't have a good track record where that is concerned if you see how TNB and our public trains are concerned.
Fourth, First Solar recently opened a RM2bil plant in Kulim. So, we actually have a solar panel manufacturer here on our shore.
Yet, it never occurred to TNB to approach First Solar to setup a solar power plant.
If France, a Mediterranean country, finds using solar energy good enough to be part of its energy-generation needs, then we must ask TNB - why can't Malaysia do the same?
MY COMMENT: Ask TNB? Ha ha ha. The world is plagued with dinosaur technologies because it is secretly run by dinosaur dynasties. Whether the family name happens to be Rameses, Thutmose, Amunhotep, Ming, Han, Sung, Borgia, Medici, Hapsburg, Plantagenet, Rothschild, Rockefeller, Morgan, Bush, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Windsor, Razak, Taib or Mahathir... we're dealing with powerful bloodlines that absolutely believe they are entitled to ownership and exploitation of the Earth and all her inhabitants.
These are the so-called Master Bloodlines that have utterly misunderstood the meaning of Mastery. They measure the power of a Master by the number of Slaves at his command. Little do they realize that a TRUE MASTER is master only of his own destiny and the way he responds to his environment.
Because they are so reliant on other people's weakness for their own sense of power, they are terrified of technologies that liberate rather than enslave. That's why they are invariably drawn to colossal and expensive methods - especially capital-intensive schemes that can further enslave the human race and ensure that traditional power hierarchies are perpetuated ad infinitum.
The Serbian supergenius, Nikola Tesla, produced a host of breakthrough inventions that might have freed humanity from drudgery and enslavement and enabled real wealth to spread throughout the social spectrum. Of course, he was thwarted at every turn by avaricious and cynical capitalist elites who understood and cared for nothing but profits, profits, and always fatter profits.
We have to stop these desperate dinosaur bloodlines from foisting their destructive technologies on an ignorant and unsuspecting population. Educate yourself now... before it's too late!
[Originally published in this blog on 27 August 2009]
Nuke plant jolts environmentalists
So you're having your first nuclear power plant...
[Originally published in this blog on 27 August 2009]
Nuke plant jolts environmentalists
So you're having your first nuclear power plant...
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Does this boy deserve a bullet in the head?
Form 3 student at Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Seksyen 9 Shah Alam |
Making monkey faces for the album...
HE "BORROWED" HIS SISTER'S PROTON ISWARA AND WENT OUT AFTER MIDNIGHT WITH HIS 15-YEAR-OLD BUDDY, AZAMUDDIN OMAR. THEY HAD A SNACK AND WATCHED SOME FOOTBALL AT A MAMAK STALL.
AS THEY WERE LEAVING FOR HOME, AMINULRASYID ACCIDENTALLY HIT A PARKED CAR BUT DECIDED TO DRIVE OFF. SOON THE BOYS FOUND THEMSELVES PURSUED BY MOTORCYCLISTS.
THEY WERE SPOTTED BY A POLICE PATROL CAR, WHCH RADIOED FOR REINFORCEMENTS BEFORE GIVING CHASE. SHOTS WERE FIRED. AMINULRASYID LOST CONTROL OF THE CAR AND RAMMED INTO A TREE NEAR HIS HOME. ACCORDING TO AZAMUDDIN, THE COPS KEPT FIRING AND ONE BULLET CAUGHT AMINULRASYID IN THE BACK OF HIS HEAD. AZAMUDDIN SAYS HE GOT OUT OF THE CAR AND TRIED TO SURRENDER BUT WAS SAVAGELY ASSAULTED BY THE COPS. SOMEHOW HE MANAGED TO STRUGGLE FREE AND ESCAPED...
AMINULRASYID AMZAH WAS A FUN-LOVING 14-YEAR-OLD,
LOVED BY HIS FRIENDS AND FULL OF BEANS...
HE "BORROWED" HIS SISTER'S PROTON ISWARA AND WENT OUT AFTER MIDNIGHT WITH HIS 15-YEAR-OLD BUDDY, AZAMUDDIN OMAR. THEY HAD A SNACK AND WATCHED SOME FOOTBALL AT A MAMAK STALL.
AS THEY WERE LEAVING FOR HOME, AMINULRASYID ACCIDENTALLY HIT A PARKED CAR BUT DECIDED TO DRIVE OFF. SOON THE BOYS FOUND THEMSELVES PURSUED BY MOTORCYCLISTS.
THEY WERE SPOTTED BY A POLICE PATROL CAR, WHCH RADIOED FOR REINFORCEMENTS BEFORE GIVING CHASE. SHOTS WERE FIRED. AMINULRASYID LOST CONTROL OF THE CAR AND RAMMED INTO A TREE NEAR HIS HOME. ACCORDING TO AZAMUDDIN, THE COPS KEPT FIRING AND ONE BULLET CAUGHT AMINULRASYID IN THE BACK OF HIS HEAD. AZAMUDDIN SAYS HE GOT OUT OF THE CAR AND TRIED TO SURRENDER BUT WAS SAVAGELY ASSAULTED BY THE COPS. SOMEHOW HE MANAGED TO STRUGGLE FREE AND ESCAPED...
I USED TO GET UP TO MISCHIEF LIKE THAT WHEN I WAS FIFTEEN.
BUT BACK THEN, THE COPS WEREN'T SO TRIGGER-HAPPY.
AND THEY DIDN'T HAVE KHALID ABU BAKAR AS THEIR BOSS.
WE DEMAND THE IGP's RESIGNATION.
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