Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Ayuh banteras pembuangan bayi!!!!!!!

by:

* Nita Futiesya Binti Kamson
* Noraini Binti Hassan Basri
* Nurul Ain Binti Saidon
* Siti Norhashira binti Mat lazim



Huwaa !!“Huwaa!!

Sayup-sayup kedengaran suara bayi menangis. “ Masya Allah anak siapakah yang ditinggalkan di tepi semak ini? Zalim sungguh!!. Gejala pembuangan bayi semakin menjadi-jadi dari hari ke hari dan seperti sudah menjadi trend masa kini. Remaja masa kini seolah-olah hanyut dalam arus kemodenan dan keseronokan yang dicipta sendiri oleh mereka. Isu pembuangan bayi bagaikan tidak habis-habis diperkatakan setiap hari di dada-dada akhbar. Bayi yang tidak berdosa ini dibuang ke dalam tong sampah, tandas, kotak, semak, tepi sungai dan tempat-tempat lain tanpa ada perasaan perikemanusiaan. Punca yang paling jelas berlakunya gejala pembuangan bayi ini adalah kerana hasilnya anak luar nikah dari persetubuhan haram. Tatkala ingin menyembunyikan perbuatan dusta itu mereka sanggup membuang bayi dengan harapan diberi peluang menjalani kehidupan baru.


Hukuman denda dan sebatan yang dikenakan keatas pembuang bayi ini seolah-olah tidak memberikan apa-apa kesan kepada mereka. Hukuman yang lebih berat harus dikenakan kepada mereka bagi membanteras kegiatan yang tidakberperikemanusiaan ini. Namun hukuman berat sekalipun jika pelaku itu sendiri tidak mempunyai kesedaran di dalam diri mereka ianya akan tetap terus berlaku dalam masyarakat kita.


Semua pihak seperti masyarakat mahupun pihak kerajaan perlu berkerjasam dalam memberikan dorongan kepada mereka dan bukannya hanya berpeluk tubuh dan mengabaikan mereka. Terdapat juga ahli masyarakat yang hanya menunding jari terhadap golongan remaja. kerana menganggap isu ini adalah sesuatu yang memalukan. Bimbingan dari masyarakat sebenarnya sedikit sebanyak dapat membantu mereka merasa kurang rasa tertekan mungkin dengan cara ini isu pembuangan bayi dapat dikurangkan.

Pihak berkuas juga perlu memainkan peranan dalam menjejaki ibu bapa mangsa bayi. Ibu bapa mangsa bayi yang dibuang tidak dikesan bersungguh-sungguh sehingga masalah penjagaan bayi diserapkan bulat-bulat kepada pihak hospital dan Jabatan Kebajikan Masyarakat. Galakan daripada badan tertentu yang sanggup memelihara mangsa ini juga sebenarnya mengalakan lagi pembuangan bayi kerana mereka berpendapat terdapat golongan yang akan menyayangi anak mereka dan memelihara anak mereka dengan baik dan mereka hanya terlepas begitu sahaja jika tidak dapat ditangkap.

Selain itu pihak media juga perlu memainkan peranan mereka sebagai salah satu pihak yang boleh menyampaikan maklumat secara terus kepada masyarakat. Pengiklanan tentang isu pembuangan bayi di media cetak mahupun media elektronik diharap dapat menimbulkan rasa keinsafan dalam diri masyarakat dan mereka dapat memuhasabahkan diri dan mengambil iktibar dengan apa yang telah terjadi dan diharapkan dapat memberikan pengajaran kepada mereka.

Semua pihak perlu bekerjasama dalam membanteras isu pembuangan bayi disamping hukuman yang lebih dikenakan kepada pesalah. Mereka yang telah tersasar dari landasan agama dan syariat islam di harap tidak terus melakukan kesilapan yang sama. Bertaubatlah kerana Allah masih menyayangi dirimu.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

PERSONALITY PROFILE

Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj ibni Almarhum Sultan Abdul Hamid Halim Shah, was born in Istana Pelamin, Alor Star, Kedah, the seventh son and twentieth child of Sultan Abdul Hamid Halim Shah, the twenty-fourth Sultan of Kedah. His mother, Paduka Seri Cik Menjalara, was the Sultan's sixth wife and the daughter of a Siamese nobleman, Luang Naraborirak (Kleb), a Thai district officer (Nonthaburi Province) during the sway of King Rama V of Thailand. As a child liked nothing better than to play with the children in the kampungs, beyond the istana (palace) in which he was reared. Abdul Rahman start his education in 1909 at a Malay Primary School, Jalan Baharu, in Alor Star and transferred to the Government English School, now the Sultan Abdul Hamid College, Alor Star,at that time he studied during the day and read the Qur'an in the afternoon. When he first went to school in Alor Star, Kedah, little Tunku screamed against what he considered was the indignity of being carried to and fro by a Court retainer. Royalty was autocratic those days and little princes were not supposed to dirty their feet, hence they were carried everywhere. The Tunku rejoiced the day he didn’t have to be carried to school.
Two years later in 1911, when he was eight, he was sent to study at Debsirin School in Bangkok along with his three brothers. In 1915, he returned and continued his studies at Penang Free School.
In 1918, Abdul Rahman was awarded a Kedah State Scholarship to further studies at St Catharine's College in the University of Cambridge, where he obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1925. He was the first student from Kedah to study in the United Kingdom under the sponsorship of the Kedah State Government.
Prior to joining St Catherine's, he was being coached in the little village of Little Stukeley in Huntingdon, England for entry to a public school
The Tunku was fond of fast driving in England, which would earn him 28 traffic offences while there. Upon his return home, Abdul Rahman worked in the Kedah public service and was appointed as District Officer of Kulim and Sungai Petani. In colonial Malaya, almost all the District Officers were British. Abdul Rahman who was the only Malay District Officer at that time had the people's interest at heart. This made him cross swords with the British Administration many times.
However, the British Administration in Kedah could not do anything as he was a prince and the son of the Sultan. However, he angering the colonial administration cost him many chances of promotion to higher offices.
After that, he returned to England to complete his law studies at the Inner Temple but was forced to stop in 1938. At the outbreak of World War II, he returned to Malaya.
During the Japanese Occupation of Kedah, the Tunku was responsible for saving many lives, both Malay and Chinese. He being of royal blood was highly revered by the Japanese and could not be touched by them, and he used this to his advantage. Many people from Kulim today lay claim to owing their lives to the Tunku.
He resumed his studies at the Inner Temple in 1947 and in 1949, he qualified for the Bar. During this period, Abdul Rahman met Abdul Razak Hussein. He was voted president of the Malay Society of Great Britain, and Abdul Razak, who was twenty-six, was his secretary. After his return to Malaya in 1949, Abdul Rahman was first posted at the Legal Officer's office in Alor Star. He later asked to be transferred to Kuala Lumpur, where he became a Deputy Public Prosecutor. He was later appointed as president of the Sessions Court.
During this period, nationalism was running high among the Malays, with Datuk Onn Jaafar leading the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) in the struggle against Britain'sMalayan Union (see History of Malaysia). Abdul Rahman joined UMNO and became active in Malayan nationalist politics. He was popular and later became head of the Kedah branch of UMNO.
In August 1951 an internal crisis in UMNO forced Datuk Onn Jaafar to resign as party president. Abdul Rahman was elected as the new president, eventually holding the post for 20 years.
In 1954 Abdul Rahman led a delegation to London to seek independence for Malaya, but the trip proved to be unfruitful. The British were reluctant to grant independence, using the excuse that there needed to be evidence that the different races in Malaya were able to work together and cooperate before independence could be obtained.
Race relations were the cause of Onn Jaafar stepping down. He wanted UMNO to be open to the Chinese and Indians but UMNO members were not ready to accept this. His successor, Abdul Rahman saw a way around this by forming a political alliance with the Malayan Chinese Association called the Alliance Party. The coalition proved to be popular among the people. The Alliance was later joined by the Malayan Indian Congress (MIC) in 1955, representing the Indian community.
In the same year, the first federal general election was held, and the Alliance Party (Perikatan) won fifty-one out of the fifty-two seats contested. Abdul Rahman was selected as Malaya's first Chief Minister.


Tunku Abdul Rahman proclaiming Malayan independence.
Later in 1955 Abdul Rahman made another trip to London to negotiate Malayan independence, and 31 August 1957 was decided as the date for independence. When the British flag was lowered in Kuala Lumpur on independence day, Abdul Rahman led the crowd in announcing "Merdeka!" (independence). Photographs of Abdul Rahman raising his hand, and recordings of his emotional but determined voice leading the cheers, have become familiar icons of Malaysian independence.
Abdul Rahman dominated the politics of independent Malaya (which became Malaysia in 1963), and led the Alliance to landslide wins in the 1959, and 1964 general elections.
The formation of Malaysia was one of Abdul Rahman's greatest achievements. In 1961 he made a speech at the Foreign Correspondents Association of Southeast Asia in Singapore, proposing a federation Malaya, Singapore, Sabah, Sarawak, andBrunei. On 16 September 1963, with the federation of all these states except Brunei, Abdul Rahman was formally restyled Prime Minister of Malaysia.
On 7 August 1965, Abdul Rahman announced to the Parliament of Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur that it should vote yes on the resolution to have Singapore leave the Federation.
At the 1969 general election, the Alliance's majority was greatly reduced. Demonstrations following the elections sparked the May 13 racial riots in Kuala Lumpur. Some UMNO leaders led by Tun Abdul Razak were critical of Abdul Rahman's leadership during these events, and an emergency committee MAGERAN took power and declared a state of emergency.
Abdul Rahman's powers as Prime Minister were severely curtailed, and on 22 September 1970, he was forced to resign as Prime Minister in favour of Abdul Razak. He subsequently resigned as UMNO President in June 1971, in the midst of severe opposition of the 'Young Turks' comprising party rebels such as Mahathir Mohammad and Musa Hitam. The duo later became Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia respectively.
After making Islam the official religion in 1960, Abdul Rahman established the Islamic Welfare Organisation (PERKIM), an organization to help Muslim converts adjust to new lives as Muslims. He was President of PERKIM until a year before his death. In 1961 Malaysia hosted the first International Qur'an Recital Competition, an event that developed from Abdul Rahman's idea when he organized the first state-level competition in Kedah in 1951.
In 1969 Abdul Rahman helped to set up the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), of which he was the first Secretary-General. Subsequently, he initiated the setting up of the Islamic Development Bank as a specialized institution within the OIC. He was also President of the Regional Islamic Da'wah Council of South East Asia and the Pacific (RISEAP) from 1982 to 1988.
An avid sportsman, Tunku Abdul Rahman was a firm believer that sports was a good catalyst to bring about greater social unity among Malaysians of various races and religions. Therefore he supported or started many sports events.
Tunku initiated an international football tournament, the Pestabola Merdeka (Independence Football Festival) in 1957. The following year, he was elected as the first president of Asian Football Confederation (AFC), a post he held until 1976.
Tunku also loved horse racing and was a regular at the Selangor Turf Club. He claims his lucky number is 13. He would win horse races that were held on the 13th of the month. Winning was a sure thing on Friday the 13th for him, he claimed.
In 1977, having acquired substantial shares in The Star, a Penang-based newspaper, Abdul Rahman became the newspaper's Chairman. His columns, "Looking Back" and "As I See It", were critical of the government, and in 1987 Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad banned the newspaper. This led to a split in UMNO, with Abdul Rahman and another former Prime Minister, Tun Hussein Onn, setting up a new party called UMNO Malaysia, but its registration was quashed by Mahathir Mohamad, who set up his own UMNO Baru ("New UMNO"). Abdul Rahman later supported Semangat 46, a splinter group of UMNO led by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah. He campaigned actively for the latter in the General election of 1990, but was already in very poor health. The well-educated, visionary Tunku clashes with Mahathir's brand nationalism that was meant to help the economically and socially stunted Malays of Malaysia (due to the effect of colonial British 'divide and rule' system).
Tunku Abdul Rahman died on 6 December 1990 at the age of eighty-seven, and was laid to rest at the Langgar Royal Mausoleum in Alor Star.