Monday, August 24, 2009

RM500 million for all

After waiting for an apology that did not materialised, at last Ong Tee Keat is suing KDSB boss Tiong King Sing for half a billion ringgit for claiming that he (Tiong) had donated RM10 million to Tee Keat for MCA's activities. Tee Keat had denied that the so-called contribution took place and gave Tiong one week to withdraw his claims or he will sue for defamation.


If Tiong is found guilty and Tee Keat awarded the damages to the tune of half a billion ringgit, many groups will benefit from this suit as Tee Keat already committed to donate the money to charity and education purposes if he wins the suit. Hmmm... all those looking forward for a slice of the half a billion ringgit should holds prayers service for Tee Keat so that he can win the case and distribute the award money to the people.


On the other hand, if Tiong wants to show one upmanship against Ong and seek public goodwill, maybe he should also declare that if he manage to overturn the suit by Tee Keat, he will also be allocating RM1 billion to be contributed to all the Chinese schools in the country in annual instalments until 2050. Considering the value of the PKFZ contract and probable claims and income until year 2050, it should not be a difficult task.


The only question is, in the eyes of the public who is the better bet to win the case and who the public will believe to be more truthful and trustworthy in taking care of the community needs without expecting any favours in return.


Can the schools and welfare organizations submit their application for their share now since the donation will be coming from the same source! - Loka

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Nation's day

As of today the national flag is still not fluttering outside the house. Motorists and passers-by has not been taking a second look at the "patriotic" house. The flag has not been raised not because of the haze or the influenza A H1N1 pandemic that is already creating fear amongst the populace. It's not that the householder do not have any free flags from the government. The old but decent looking national flag is still in the drawer. Waiting for the owner to pick it up and raise on the pole tied to the front gate.


Is the national day will be around the corner soon? Not sure about you all but it seems the country is too pre-occupied with other matters. It's not that the people do not love the country or are patriotic, it is just that there are too much things in their head to think and worry about.



H1N1 is now a more popular and widely spoken word in the country compared to "merdeka". People will be jostling for free face mask(if there is any distributed) rather than miniature national flags.Even if they obtained the free miniature flag, people might modified it into a face mask. Why not? Two-in-one package. One can be patriotic and protects oneself from the dreaded H1N1 infection at the same time.



Take a look at the main stream media, online news portal and blogs, many other popular words that can seen easily nowadays includes corruption, by-election, politician and prosecution. The people are facing an onslaught of these words because those in the political circles are so pre-occupied with all these things. At the end of the day it seems there is one word which they uncharacteristically forgotten - the nation.




The people need to take initiative to shake them out from this slumber and remind them that the people and nation should come first and foremost. People first should not be just a slogan on billboards or television jingles. If the powers that be do not take the nation as the priority, all these slogans and lip service will be just like the recently launched Touch "N" Go cards, it will a hot item initially, but once the pre-loaded value is fully utilized, the card will be of no use if you do not load it again.



The flag is already hoisted on the top floor of house and I am proud to remember the birth and spirit of the nation. - Loka

Friday, August 7, 2009

Let's march for the nation

Malaysia will be celebrating her 52nd year of freedom from colonial powers on 31 August 2009. What is the meaning of this day of freedom ?


Since 31 August is a national public holiday some will take the opportunity to spend more time with their family or beloved ones. Taking advantage on the final day of the Mega Sales Carnival, shopaholics will be swarming the shopping complexes looking for last minutes bargain especially those in big cities crowded with shopping malls. For those who has been sweating it out for the week, the long weekend will the time to have a good rest on the couch.


For those involving in the national day annual parades; brazing through hot suns, inhaling the dreaded haze which is an annual Merdeka gift mostly from our "brotherly" neighbour and drenched by the intermitten rain (not from water cannons though) is already part and parcel of of the package for these patriotic marchers. No worry, those marching along the designated routes will not be sued by the shopowners, KFC, or the goreng pisang and cendol hawkers for causing their sales and profits to drop.


On the contrary, they should be enjoying roaring business from those people that crashed into the parade sites to witness the parade. For sure the ice-cream man and the mamak stalls will be replenishing their stock to fulfill the fanstastic demand. Wonder if these businesses along the routes will share their extra profit with the march organisers since they are the one that brings in more people to the streets.


Why do these people march? No doubt they must be having a valid reason to spend weeks practising and rehearsing their steps marching to the rhythm to ensure nothing went arong so that they can put up a great show on that memorable day. They will be marching as what their forefathers did more than 52 years ago.


Their forefathers marches for a belief, the belief that one day their land shall be free from the clutches of the domineering, high and mighty powers of the day. They dreamt one day they will be able to build a great nation for themselves and their children, and their childrens children. A place where everyone can breathe the same air of freedom with a peaceful mind and hold into their heart that this land will provide a just and equitable opportunity for all to build a happy and comfortable place which they can call home.


Now 52 years later, their sons and daughters will also march to protect the freedom that is promised to all and to remember with gratitude those before them that had sacrificed and dedicated they lives for the nation because they believed it is the right thing to do. On 31 August, for those marching throughout the country, at Padang Merdeka in Kuching, Waterfront in Kota Kinabalu, Dataran Kemerdekaan in Shah Alam, Danga Bay in Johore Bahru, Seberang Prai in Penang and so on, they will be marching with the vigour and spirit of their predecessors. They will march to ensure their freedom will be defended and the right to their religious and cultural practices will be respected and to ensure the destiny of the nation will not falls into the hands of bigots and self serving individuals and parties.


Yes, on 31 August all of us will rise early and raise the Jalur Gemilang under the sun that shines over our land and we shall march together for the freedom, justice, progress and a united nation.


Selamat Menyambut Hari Kemerdekaan ke 52.
Long Live Malaysia! - Loka

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Monk and horse do ticks

By now many religionists all over the world would have read news about Singaporean monk Ven Ming Yi being charged and stand trial in court for falsifying accounts and giving false information. His trial ends on Monday 3 August 2009 and the judgement is expected to be delivered in October this year.



In all these years many had benefited from the charity work that he had done and appreciated all the efforts he put into to ensure the charity projects are able to sustain and operate smoothly.



All the facts and information in relation to the 5Cs that flows out during the trial would have been accepted by the people in good faith if he has been just a typical CEO, enjoying good life as a successful corporate man.



He would have been a model for exemplary leadership in charity management and high-end social lifestyle but it turns into a controversy because Ming Yi is not wearing a corporate jacket with a tie but a monk's robe with rosary over his neck.



This sort of publicity is not what the people especially the Buddhists is asking for. What makes a "modern" monk? Does it mean living like a layperson and enjoys the good lifestyle and luxuries while wearing a monk's robe. Is this the message for potential samaneras and monks? Go through the rites of passage for monkhood, shaved the head, recites the monks Vinaya, wears a robe, study the Suttas, accepts devotees dana, preach the Dhamma to the devotees, attend Buddhist conferences and meetings, lead temples in different countries and so on and so forth. And not forgetting to have a horse named Venezuela as a pet and owns chic cars. Is there any other type of lifestyles which need to be added?



All this mind boggling actions would not have affected devotees confidence in the Sangha if the person is a layman with businesses in different countries. Many years ago during my university days I heard a lecturer says, when you are a king, act like a king; when you are beggar, act like a beggar and when you are a layman, you may act as you like at your own risk but when you are a monk please respect the robe and protects the Dhamma.



There are many "wished it never happens" stories which did not sees the print in the newspapers because devotees and committed members of the Sangha had put their level best to contain the situation and protect the sanctity of the religion and the monk's robe. We can only share our merits and transfer our aspirations to those that strayed from the path to have Hiri-Ottappa to come back to the right track. Other than that we leave it to their karma and ours too if we did not do anything to rectify the situation and protects the religion. - Loka



Sunday August 2, 2009 The Star
Monk with the 5Cs


By CAROLYN QUEK




Cash, credit card, car, country club membership and condo – the self-confessed modern-day monk has got them all.




A BUDDHIST monk for 25 years, former Ren Ci chief Ming Yi also achieved the Singapore dream of the five Cs.
He had cash – at one stage, he had S$570,000 (RM1.39mil) in his personal bank account.
He had credit cards – at least nine from various banks bore his real name of Goh Kah Heng. He also held at least three supplementary cards for his personal assistant Raymond Yeung.



Lap of luxury: Former Ren Ci chief Ming Yi had a membership at the prestigious The Vines Resort & Country Club in Perth, Australia. — The Straits Times
He had condominium units – he bought and sold at least six private properties in Singapore and Australia over 20 years.
He had cars – he bought at least three BMWs in six years, including one for Yeung.
And he had a country club membership – at the prestigious The Vines Resort & Country Club in Perth.
The spending habits of the monk were revealed in court over the past two weeks, where Ming Yi, 47, and Yeung, 34, face charges of conspiring to falsify a Ren Ci payment voucher and of giving false information.
The prosecution attempted to paint him out to be a spendthrift who was lax with his own money, and possibly that of the charity he founded too.
By his own admission, Ming Yi was a “modern-day monk”.
“Buddhist monks are no longer living in the mountains or in the forest. We are in the city now,” he said when responding to a question about how religious people were very different now.
Apart from the condominiums, cars and credit cards, the court heard how he forked out A$2,000 (RM5,800) every two months to maintain a horse in Perth, spent S$45 (RM110) at a tanning salon in Melbourne, and more than S$l,000 (RM2,440) for a two-night stay in Bintan’s Angsana Resort and Spa.
When quizzed about his horse named Venezuela, Ming Yi said he wanted it as a pet.
“Not many of us in this courtroom are horse owners. Can you tell us the monthly maintenance?” asked Deputy Public Prosecutor Jaswant Singh.
Ming Yi said he could not remember. Receipts produced by the prosecution showed that Venezuela cost him A$2,000 every two months.
He also did not remember buying a BMW540 series with leather seats for about A$163,500 (RM475,000), although his signature was on the purchase form.
At one stage in the trial, Ming Yi admitted being easy with money.
“Were you easy with Ren Ci’s money as well?” DPP Singh shot back.
“No,” said the monk. “Like I said, a lot of religious people, not only myself, are very different now.”
Condominiums
In the late 1980s, the monk bought his first property in Mountbatten Road, financed by donations from devotees and a mortgage loan.
The property, bought for S$1.48mil (RM3.62mil) and sold in 1993 for S$3mil (RM7.34mil), housed Chao Yin Lodge, a Buddhist centre he ran, where his devotees gathered to learn from him.
In 1994, he used money from the sale of the Mountbatten property to upgrade to a S$1.4mil (RM3.42mil) two-storey house in Bedok Ria Crescent, where the lodge was relocated. He paid the amount in full.
A year later, he bought an apartment for S$1.38mil (RM3.37mil) at The Atria in the East Coast. This was an investment to help Ren Ci, he said.
These last two properties were bought at a time when he had just set up Ren Ci and he had earlier stated that they were difficult times for the charity in terms of raising money for its work.
More investments followed, this time beyond Singapore’s shores.
He went to Perth where he bought a plot of land for the Foo Hai Chan monastery, where he is abbot.
“It was my mistake at that time. I should not have purchased the land,” he said. “I think at that point in time, we talked about Foo Hai Chan going further etc, but it did not materialise, so eventually we sold it.”
Before that piece of land was sold, a A$300,000 (RM870,000) house was built on it. He also had a A$1.48mil (RM4.3mil) penthouse, which came with a private lift, in Melbourne.
DPP Singh said: “While you want the court to believe that you were trying to do your utmost where Ren Ci is concerned, you yourself were living the good life in Perth?”
Ming Yi said: “Eventually I did not stay there. I think I was only there three, four times. I don’t really go there.”
The prosecutor pressed on: “Is it okay for Buddhist monks to have properties in various parts of the world? Is that what a modern monk does?”
“There are many people who have that,” replied Ming Yi.
When asked if that was his belief, he said: “I’m not saying that it is a must. That’s why you see after investing in properties and all that, after that I did not want to invest any more because as time changes, my thoughts change as well.”
He said he saw his properties as investments.
Cars, cash and credit cards
BMW appeared to be his favourite brand – he owned at least three of them.
Although he could not remember the first BMW he bought in Perth in 1998, it was black, according to the purchase form.
Another BMW, bought in 2004, was a 5-series and worth about A$128,000 (RM370,000).
The BMW he bought for Yeung was a 3-series worth A$88,000 (RM255,000).
“All along, I liked European cars because they are more steady. That’s why I got myself a BMW,” Ming Yi said.
At one point in 2006, he had more than S$500,000 (RM1.22mil) in his bank account. A large part of this, he said, had been given to him by a devotee making a donation to the Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic.
But he had mounting credit card debts. In May 2004, he owed the banks more than S$70,000 (RM171,200) in unpaid bills.
But his lawyer, Senior Counsel Andre Yeap, pointed out that his client had made only one luxury purchase from 2001 to 2006 – an item from Hugo Boss costing more than S$560 (RM1,370).
The bulk of the credit card spending was apparently done by Yeung, who spent thousands shopping at Hermes, Louis Vuitton and Ermenegildo Zegna.
The court was also told that Ming Yi and Wee Beng Seng, an ex-treasurer of Ren Ci, were joint members of the Vines Golf & Country Club in Perth.
DPP Singh described it as “one of the more upmarket resorts in Western Australia”.
A total of A$27,990 (RM81,000) was paid in July 1998 for Ming Yi and Wee to join as members. Subsequent annual fees for international membership stood at a total of A$990 (RM2,800).
The court heard that during an outing at the Burswood Casino, also in Perth, two withdrawals of A$900 (RM2,600) were made one night. Ming Yi claimed that Wee had made the withdrawals.
He later said that Wee, a former drug addict whom he counselled at a drug rehabilitation centre in the 1980s, would make occasional trips to casinos when overseas, but that he was not a compulsive gambler.
Charity was close to his heart
While Ming Yi looked sheepish and at times exasperated when grilled about his lifestyle, he spoke passionately about another C – his charity.
He spoke at length about his “baby” Ren Ci and how the whole cover-up about a S$50,000 (RM122,300) loan was meant to protect the charity’s reputation.
After witnessing the public backlash from the National Kidney Foundation scandal in 2005, he did not wish the same fate to befall Ren Ci.
“Yes, I knew it was wrong (to cover up the loan) ... if there was a poisonous snake that crept into the building and a lot of people are there and the bite can kill, I might kill the poisonous snake,” he said.
“Although I was wrong, I was looking at the big picture of Ren Ci. I did not want any more harm to Ren Ci.
“Because in Buddhism, we are supposed to abstain from killing, we are not supposed to kill. But, however, to save more people, I would just have to kill the poisonous snake.”
DPP Singh said: “Were you looking after yourself?”
Ming Yi replied: “I had to look after myself in order to look after others.
“I think when you talk about impermanence, even in a modern-day monk, in a modern-day world, in a modern-day society, which you talk about impermanence, the properties that I may have, I have sold them, the money that I may have, I will lose them at the end of the day. I will not always cling to it. That is impermanence.”
To this, the prosecutor said: “Now Venerable, I want to put it to you, your public persona is that you were selflessly committed to Ren Ci and Foo Hai Chan and you were anxiously trying to find monies.
“On the other hand, you were trying to hide your private persona, which is luxury living in Perth and two properties in Singa­pore.”
Did Ming Yi believe in luxury, DPP Singh probed the monk.
Ming Yi said he would be perfectly comfortable living in a village in Sri Lanka, China or Thailand.
“I think actions speak louder than words. The people in Foo Hai Chan, the people in Ren Ci would know what I’ve done.”
DPP Singh commented: “Indeed, your actions spoke louder than your words in Perth.”
The monk replied: “I had my flaws, yes, I agree, but that does not mean that I am not taking care of Ren Ci Hospital and Foo Hai Chan monastery.”

Monday, August 3, 2009

Chief monk resigns

The BMSM elected a new team to lead the society for the next two years. Chee Peck Kiat was elected president replacing Ang Choo Hong who calls it a day. The lineup includes vice presidents Patrick Phoon, Chua Chong Kee, Soon Koi Voon and the only female Loh Pai Ling. Jeffrey Pang won the secretary general position uncontested while Ng Lai Peng elected the new treasurer, also unopposed.

Out-going president Ang Choo Hong





Other new office bearers are assistant secretary Kong Tin Lai, assistant treasurer Looi S.K and committee members Quah Chi Boon, Yong Kut Seng, Hemadasa, Pau Kiew Wu, Ng Hong Pau, Goh Seng Chai, Sarath Surendre, Wong Ong, Chang Lam Yen, Lim Chee Keong, Chan Tien Fu and Selina Lim.




In-coming president Chee Peck Kiat





The meeting dragged on for five hours due to some contentious issues spilled over from the previous annual general meeting. There was even a proposal for certain item in the minutes to be expunged! Wow, if in every meeting certain parts of the meeting are to be expunged when anyone do not agrees with it then in future historians will not have any reliable reference to refer to do their writing since everything has already been expunged!

The new secretary general Jeffery Pang already started his duty earlier


Sadly the annual meeting which is supposed to enable members to participate and provide inputs for the development of society was turn into a "battle ground" between certain individuals and groups. Claims and counter claims were hurled at each other on the protracted issue of unauthorised printing of receipts books with the name and logo of BMSM which was used to collect fund from the public.


Anymore nominations? Returning officer Jerry Khoo calls out.


One member who is also a president of another organisation even accused the BMSM president for implying that he is telling a lie! One member even "threatened" to return to his previous religion if the meeting do not proceed to his liking! Another accused the treasurer of not knowing how to do his job but surprisingly this same out-going treasurer was elected one of the vice presidents. BMSM really have colourful figures amongst its 10,000 plus members.

The meeting also took a dramatic twist when at the midst of the debate on the receipts issue which police reports has been made last year, the society religious advisor, Ven K Dhammaratana took the floor and claimed that he has been shamed and was "slapped" in the face in public. He duly took out a signed resignation letter and hand it over to the secretary general. The letter stated his "resignation" is with immediate effect. He then left the meeting hall in a huff, purportly for his lunch dana.


"I was shamed and "slapped" in public" - Dhammaratana

For lay persons who may not understand the Vinaya, it will be interesting to know whether this action of submitting "resignation" letters during the AGM is the best approach? In actual sense, he don't even have to do that since based on the society constitution all previous appointments would have automatically ceased to be valid with the dissolvement of the committee.


Many organisations issue new letter of appointments to their immediate past advisors in every new term of office. If one desires, one can politely declines the re-appointment, if there is any one forthcoming, when the newly elected committee decides on the new list of advisors. This is just like when devotees offers medicine dana to a monk, if the monk felt that he had enough or do not feel like having more, he puts his hand on top of the alms bowl to convey his intention. No questions asked. The monk did not need to be coaxed to take more. Well informed devotees will surely understands that gesture and will just move on to offer dana to the next monk. Period. - Loka