Sunday, July 31, 2011

Begor Pondok Suryo @ Senopati

 makan nasi dalam lesung.... marah mak aku kalau dia tahu

 burung dara.....(virgin bird?)

 bebek... itik goreng

teh poci (sesuai untuk orang kepohci :) )

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Beautika, Menado food, Jakarta

Mr Ika and family invited us for dinner at Beautika.... Menado food... I nearly burnt my tongue and the lining of my stomach.

feeling hot hot hot.....






Monday, July 25, 2011

TGIF @ Gardens, Mid Valley

1st trip to Mid Malley in months..... and the kids wanna stuff their stomach with the large portions from TGIF






Saturday, July 23, 2011

stuck in traffic to Seremban....

the journey from Shah Alam to Seremban which normally would take me 45 minutres was strtched to over 2.5 hours...... I SMS Azman @ PLUS what was the reason for this big jam, his answer was a pile up just before Seremban exit....



 here was the reason


2 dead when a lorry banged into a stationery car transporter

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Jalan-jalan cari durian ke Karak

Tak ada kerja cari kerja..... kerana durian, sibuk test drive kereta ke Karak :)





its worth the drive :)

Friday, July 08, 2011

yea... read your history before you speak you stupid mind...

way to go Ahmad Durah.....

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/01/07/letter-on-rimalaysia-relations.html


Letter: On RI-Malaysia relations

| Fri, 01/07/2011 10:53 AM
A | A | A |
This is a comment on “RI-Malaysia relations: All in the family, (The Jakarta Post, Dec. 30) by Vissia Ita Yulianto of Freiburg, Germany.
I have to say that your analysis of Indonesia-Malaysia relations is very shallow.
You claim that Malaysia has claimed cultural superiority and has an institutionalized pejorative sentiment against Indonesians.
Malaysians have never claimed cultural superiority over Indonesians, with whom we share common culture. The forefathers of most Malay Malaysians, including my ancestors, are from Indonesia.
On Indonesian maids, while admittedly there are rotten eggs among Malaysian employers, there are also numerous rotten Indonesian maids who have misbehaved and tortured children under their care despite being treated kindly by their employers. Malay employers always treat Indonesian maids as part of the family, though I can’t say the same of the non-Malay employers.
On “Indon” as a racial slur, I would comment that Malaysians have never regarded “Indon” as a racial slur. It is just short for Indonesia. Don’t you think that’s obvious? Just as we refer to Australians as “Aussies” and New Zealanders as “Kiwis”.  Are the terms “Aussies” and “Kiwis” racial slurs? Your occidental reference about stereotyping with the term “Indon” is laughable.
On culture, Malaysia has never appropriated Indonesian traditional properties. I would suggest that you ask who are the people of the Malay archipelago.
The people of the Malay archipelago — which includes Indonesia, Malaysia, southern Thailand, the southern Philippines, Brunei and Singapore — are of the same stock, which I am sure you are aware of as you are student of anthropology.
These same people transmigrated within the archipelago while practicing their cultures. How can then they be accused of stealing Indonesia’s culture when these cultures predate the existence of Indonesia as a nation? Our prime minister has his roots in Sulawesi, our deputy prime minister in Java and I myself, am a Minangkabau from West Sumatra.
As a doctoral candidate, you should do a more in-depth analysis of the cultural relations between Malaysia and Indonesia and source from reliable references.

Ahmad Durah
Kuala Lumpur

apa sibuk ni???

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/07/01/rally-malaysian-embassy-protests-arrest-activists-kl.html

Rally at Malaysian Embassy protests arrest of activists in KL

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 07/01/2011 11:50 AM
A | A | A |
Activists from several local NGOs have urged the Malaysian government to release Malaysian activists from the Socialist Party of Malaysia who were captured by their government for allegedly campaigning for communism.
The 30 activists from the Socialist Party of Malaysia were allegedly captured and harassed by Malaysian police on June 28, amid an upcoming parliamentary election.
Around 25 activists are currently gathering in front of the Malaysian Embassy on Jl. Rasuna Said in Kuningan, South Jakarta.
The group were heard shouting "Malaysia anti-democracy!" at 10 a.m. on Friday.
Mahendra Kusumawardhana, a spokesperson for the protest, told The Jakarta Post that they were demanding for the Malaysian government to stop its assault on people's freedom of expression and to release the activists immediately.
"We give them two days to release the activists," he said.
Mahendra said that fellow democracy activists at Australia, Thailand and the Philippines were also protesting to Malaysian representatives in their respective countries.
Activists joining the rally were from several groups, including the Political Committee of The Poor (KPRM-PRD),
Reorganize Committee — Working People Association (KPO-PRP), Political Union of the Poor (PPRM), Inter-Factory Labor Forum (FBLP) and Perempuan Mahardika. (rpt)
 For democracy: Activists carry posters to protest the arrest of pro-reform activists by Malaysian authorities, at the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta on Friday. Rights organization Amnesty International announced on Thursday that since June 24 more than 100 activists had been arrested or questioned by Malaysian police over their support for an electoral reform rally. (JP/Rabby Pramudatama)For democracy: Activists carry posters to protest the arrest of pro-reform activists by Malaysian authorities, at the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta on Friday. Rights organization Amnesty International announced on Thursday that since June 24 more than 100 activists had been arrested or questioned by Malaysian police over their support for an electoral reform rally. (JP/Rabby Pramudatama)

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