Thursday 19 May 2016

Warning From Malaysian Government


KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysians who discredit or ridicule the Government in whatever way can be barred from travelling overseas for three years.

Those who disparage the Government while abroad will also be barred from travelling abroad again for three years upon their return.

A source said that the Immigration Department had enforced this ruling several months ago in a move to safeguard the country’s image.

“Anyone who runs down the Government or ‘memburukkan kerajaan’ in any manner will be barred from going abroad.

“Only the Immigration Department director-general will be authorised to look into their appeals,” he said, adding that the department would act once there was a request from enforcement agencies such as the police.

Immigration director general Datuk Sakib Kusmi, in an email reply to The Star, confirmed the existence of such a provision, adding that the ownership of a Malaysian international passport was a privilege and not a right.

“The Malaysian international passport is a travel document issued by the Government under the aegis of the Yang DiPertuan Agong.

“So, the Government has the discretion to either issue, defer or revoke the travel document,” he said.

Sakib could not provide statistics on the number of Malaysians who have been barred from leaving the country for discrediting or ridiculing the Government.

However, it is known that those who are bankrupt, have legal cases against them or have yet to pay government loans, are regularly stopped from leaving the country. 

Asked if Malaysians who are barred from travelling abroad could challenge this in court, Sakib said they had the right to do so.

He said the Government had initially made a list of offences that could cause a Malaysian to be temporarily barred from leaving the country back in 1995.

Individuals convicted for committing a crime at home or abroad, deliberately damaging passports and visiting Israel without approval are among the offences listed. 

They can be barred from travelling abroad for between two and 10 years.

Under the latest ruling, the source said, Malaysians who are caught and deported for overstaying, committing a crime or working without a valid permit abroad will also be barred from going overseas again for two years.

“The names of these offenders will be added to a special blacklist,” he said.

Separately, the source said Malaysians who are negligent and lose their passports three times in five years will not be issued another one for a minimum of two years.

“Negligence means losing your passport if your car is stolen or while you are moving house,” he said.

Those whose passports are destroyed due to carelessness – by leaving the document in clothes put into washing machines, for example – will also be penalised.

“If your passport is destroyed twice, you will be issued with a written warning.
“If it happens three times in five years, then you too will be barred from applying for one to two years,” he said.

Source: The Star

Wednesday 18 May 2016

Mega projects for Penang Traffic


Two major projects are in the pipeline to alleviate traffic congestion in the state, said state exco member Lim Hock Seng.
 
In his oral reply to Nordin Ahmad (BN-Bayan Lepas), he said the Bayan Lepas LRT and the Pan Island Link I Highway under the RM27bil Penang Transport Master Plan (PTMP) were scheduled to be carried out between 2017 and 2023.

The Bayan Lepas LRT willhave interchange stationsconnecting three more future LRT and monorail lines still on the drawing table.

The 20km Pan Island Link Highway will connect Gurney Drive and the Penang International Airport in Bayan Lepas.

He said the project would be carried out by SRS Consortium, the appointed project delivery partner.

He added that three proposed islands have been planned on the southern tip of Penang island which are financial model to carry out the PTMP.

Lim said the proposed undersea tunnel and three paired roads would be carried out by Consortium Zenith BUCG Sdn Bhd.

The 6.5km Penang Undersea Tunnel will connect north Butterworth to the Gurney Drive-Pangkor Road junction.

As for the three paired roads, Lim said it would be carried out in stages from 2016 to 2025.

The three paired roads are from Air Itam to Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway, Tanjung Bungah to Teluk Bahang and Jalan Pangkor-Gurney Drivejunction to Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway.

“In fact, the paired road from Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Express-way to Air Itam can be carried out in June.

“Next year, it will be the road from Tanjung Bungah to Teluk Bahang followed by the one from Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Express-way to Jalan Pangkor-Gurney Drive in 2018,” he said.

On why the three paired roads could not be carried out simultaneously, Lim said some of the lands were not ready.

“Besides, we also cannot afford to pay lump sum for the roads. It is not feasible. That’s why we have to carry out everything in stages,” he said.

Source: The Star

Tuesday 17 May 2016

Transformer 5: The Last Knight


The Transformers: The Last Knight cast is confirmed to include the return of Transformers: Age of Extinction star Mark Wahlberg as Cade Yeager as well as new roles for Isabela Moner (100 Things to Do Before High School, Growing Up Fisher) as the film’s female lead, Izabella. Jerrod Carmichael (The Carmichael Show, Neighbors) is also set to play an unspecified leading role.
Production on Transformers: The Last Knight is set to begin June 6 in Detroit with production planned to take place at various locations around the world. 

“Having one of the highest-profile film franchises created in Michigan is a major economic boost and a testament to the talent of the state’s production community,” said Jenell Leonard, commissioner of the Michigan Film & Digital Media Office when production plans were first revealed. “The production and economic investment is now happening sooner rather than later, and obviously, the project is a certainty rather than merely a possibility.”

Michael Bay returns to the director’s chair for the film, which is set to be written by Iron Man scribes Art Marcum & Matt Holloway and Ken Nolan (Black Hawk Down). Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Don Murphy and Tom DeSanto will produce the sequel.

Combined, the previous four Transformers films have brought in over $3.7 billion at the global box office with 2014’s Age of Extinction the second-highest grossing in the series. Current plans call for Transformers: The Last Knight to be followed by a Bumblebee spin-off film in 2018 before Transformers 6 arrives in 2019.

What do you think of Transformers: The Last Knight as a title? What do you think this film will be about? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

UPDATE: The official Transformers: The Last Knight Instagram has just launched and, with it, an animated look at the film’s title! Check it out below and check back for updates from the production as they become available.

Source: Comingsoon

Monday 16 May 2016

Komtar-Bayan Lepas LRT


The LRT line linking Komtar and Bayan Lepas, estimated to cost around RM7bil to construct, is expected to generate about RM2bil worth of jobs for the local construction industry, said Penang Master Builders and Building Materials Dealers Association.
 
Its president, Datuk Lim Kai Seng, said the first phase of the LRT, which involved soil investigation and alignment studies, had already generated about RM100mil worth of jobs for the local construction industry.

The proposed 30km LRT project will cushion property prices in Penang, according to Real Estate & Housing Developers Association (Penang) past chairman Datuk Jerry Chan.

“Although the volume of transactions has declined by about 30% in the first quarter compared to the previous year’s corresponding period, the price of properties, however, has not been affected yet by the decline, due to interest rates remaining at the same level, and high land and building construction costs.

“The other factor that will help to bolster property prices in Penang is the proposed LRT project. The project will definitely help (hold up) the property prices in areas where there is a high density.

“In popular areas of the island where properties are sought after, we will see prices moving up due to the accessibility of the LRT over time,” Chan said.

Zeon Properties Sdn Bhd chief executive officer Leon Lee said that the price of properties near integrated transportation systems in other countries was either stable or tend to move upwards most of the time.

He said infrastructure such as transportation centres and bridges were vital elements.

“The completion of a bridge connecting Shenzhen (China) and the New Territories of Hong Kong resulted in property prices in the surrounding areas escalating by about 155% over a period of 10 years.

“In 2002, the property price in New Territories of Hong Kong was about HK$2,742.69 per sq ft.

“It shot up to HK$7,007.38 per sq ft in 2013, which took only about 10 years,” Lee said.

Lee added that the price of property in Batu Maung had increased significantly when the second Penang bridge open.

“In 2007, a terrace house in Batu Maung was worth about RM700,000. A similar unit now is priced at RM1.4mil. This proves my earlier point (about bridges),” he said.

The Komtar-Bayan Lepas LRT is the state’s first rail network proposed under the RM27bil Penang Transport Master Plan (PTMP).

It will begin from Komtar in the northeast corner of the island and pass through Jelutong, Gelugor, Bayan Lepas and Penang International Airport before ending at the proposed Penang South Reclamation development. It is expected to provide a fast route to the airport and will traverse densely populated residential, commercial and industrial areas.

There are 27 LRT stations along the alignment, with the maintenance depot located on the first island that is to be reclaimed on the island’s south coast. The alignment also factors in interchanges with future LRT, Sky Cab and monorail lines that are being planned, including one that will cross the channel to connect Gelugor with Penang Sentral in Butterworth.

Source: The Star

Will Penang Become The Next Singapore




GEORGE TOWN, May 14 — Lim Guan Eng is a man on a mission. In five years, the Penang Chief Minister wants to make the northern Malaysian state a world-class international city. To get there, he has plans for a new multi-billion-dollar transport system, new hubs for growing service sectors and new skills training programmes, especially for island’s young.

“We want to become an international, intelligent city that is clean, green, safe and healthy, brimming with energy, expertise and entrepreneurship. An intelligent city where we not only do the right things, but doing things right. 

Where we embrace the future, not only by preparing our young for the future, but also preparing our future for the young,” he told TODAY in a brief interview in his office in George Town last week.

“If we have that, we will be the model state for the rest of Malaysia.”

Lim is not shy about taking a leaf — or more — from best practices around the world, including Singapore’s development playbook, since both share many similarities, including an economy in which electronics manufacturing and services play a big part.

He is emulating Singapore’s public housing planning and has teamed up with Singapore’s Temasek Holdings to develop a RM1.3 billion mixed-development project near its industrial zone.

He is also an admirer of Singapore’s efforts in building up its capital of human talent and is currently doing the same with Penang’s workers.

Besides eyeing Singapore, Penang is also reported to be learning from Hong Kong in embracing change and being a regional hub. The state also wants to look at the Dubai model for attracting tourism and trade.

Since helming the state — a 293 sq km island connected by two bridges to a narrow hinterland of 653 sq km — in 2008, Lim’s aim has been to transform Penang into a showcase of modern Malaysia. As it is, the state is already one of the most developed and is an electronics manufacturing hub.

He has initiated an open tender process for state projects and has installed 318 closed-circuit television cameras to monitor crime, traffic and road conditions, with another 216 units to be put up by the end of this year. The streets of Penang are now cleaner too, after Lim introduced performance-based pay for state employees, including street sweepers.

Tourism numbers have also spiked. The total number of international arrivals at Penang International Airport has grown at an annual rate of 7 per cent between 2007 and 2014.

In recent years, Lim has turned his attention to developing the mainland, especially the parliamentary constituency of Batu Kawan, which is earmarked to be Penang’s next growth centre, to ease overcrowding on the land-scarce island. Batu Kawan is connected to the island by the state’s second bridge, the Sultan Abdul Halim Muadzam Shah bridge. At 24km, the bridge is also South-east Asia’s longest.

At times, Lim has turned to Singapore for inspiration, a point he candidly made in his interview with TODAY. “What Singapore has done is to follow international best practices, and the fact that it works in Singapore and makes the city-state prosperous, we feel we can achieve the same result for Penang,” he said.

“To do that, (we) must get the basics right, namely good governance, clean leadership, investment infrastructure, building up human talent, and sustainable development.”

Penang shares many similarities with Singapore. Manufacturing is an important sector for both Singapore’s and Penang’s economy. Manufacturing constitutes about 20 per cent of Singapore’s gross domestic product (GDP), while the sector contributes nearly 55 per cent to Penang’s GDP.

The stakes are high. Penang, famed for its Assam laksa, street art and balmy beaches, is the only state governed by Lim’s Democratic Action Party (DAP). It wrested Penang from Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition in the 2008 general election and retained it in the 2013 polls. It is one of the three states controlled by the federal opposition, the others being Selangor, Malaysia’s richest state, controlled by jailed former Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat, and largely rural Kelantan, which has long been under Parti Islam Se-Malaysia.

With Malaysia’s opposition coalition in tatters due to infighting — most evident in the recent Sarawak state elections — Penang’s performance has become an even more important barometer of the opposition’s ability to govern.

Lim’s government will also need to win over sceptical political rivals in Putrajaya, whose blessing it needs for transport improvements, as well as Penangites worn out by the traffic jams and overcrowding that come with rapid development, while keeping the island’s soul.

If Lim’s plans for the state are realised, Penang could well be on its way to becoming a global city that could rival Singapore.

Manufacturing hub
Penang’s metamorphosis into a manufacturing hub began with the establishment of a Free Trade Zone near the international airport in the early 1970s, offering tax breaks and speedy investment approvals to foreign investors.

This attracted tech giants such as Intel and Bosch, as well as other electrical and electronics (E&E) factories to set up shop in the state, eventually earning it the nickname Silicon Valley of the East. Since then, about 3,000 manufacturing companies have set up operations in Penang.

Today, Penang is the E&E hub of Malaysia and accounts for 8 per cent of the back-end support for the global semiconductor industry.

Ooi Eng Hock, chairman of the Penang branch of the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM), said Penang’s competitiveness is one of the reasons Malaysia continues to rank well in various global and commercial economic rankings, including the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business listing.

The country was ranked 18th on the 2015 list while Singapore has retained the top spot for the past 10 years.

“We also have a pro-business government, liberal investment policies, efficient delivery system, well-developed infrastructure, educated work force and good quality of life,” he told TODAY, citing the advantages of setting up businesses in Penang.

Between 2000 and 2007, companies ploughed RM29.4 billion into the state’s manufacturing sector. The bulk of this, RM22.7 billion, was foreign direct investment (FDI).

According to a 2015 report by the Malaysia Industry Development Authority, Singapore ranks fifth in terms of Penang’s FDI sources, with 87 approved projects totalling RM1.3 billion.

“Penang continues to offer great value for investors from Singapore, both in the manufacturing as well as services sectors. This is more so with the current depreciated ringgit,” state investment promotion agency InvestPenang director Lee Kah Choon told TODAY in an email.

Growing services and skills
Aware that Penang cannot depend solely on its manufacturing strength, the state has cast its sights on expanding its services sector. Already, services account for 47 per cent of Penang’s GDP, just one percentage point less than the manufacturing sector.

In particular, the state government wants to turn Penang into a hub for the fast-growing sector known as shared services and outsourcing (SSO), which includes technology, accounting and other support services for companies that do not have these in-house. The SSO sector has doubled from RM6.39 billion in annual revenue in 2009 to RM12.79 billion in 2013.

Penang’s SSO sector provides more than 8,000 high-income jobs to locals and serves both regional and global markets.

In July last year, the state government entered into a joint venture with Temasek Holdings to develop a mixed-use project near Penang’s Bayan Lepas Free Industrial Zone. The RM1.3 billion project, called BPO Prime, will cover 1.6 million sqf of commercial and residential space. Businesses that set up there will take on work such as data processing, back-office administration, accounting, technical support, transcription, software development, IT consultancy and disaster recovery for client companies.

The project, scheduled to start construction next year, will be planned and managed by Economic Development Innovations Singapore (EDIS), a privately-owned international economic development company chaired by veteran civil servant Philip Yeo.

“EDIS shares Penang’s vision for the future and fully supports the forward-looking and business-friendly approach that Penang has adopted,” its senior development director Eng Gim Hwee told TODAY in an email. “There is potential for even more overseas companies to set up their operations in Penang, especially in the area of the business process outsourcing industry. EDIS’ projects will serve as key enablers in support of these efforts.”

To get its workforce ready for these new businesses, Penang has set up the Penang Skills Development Centre, where school leavers and existing workers take classes ranging from accountancy to technical courses.

The private sector has also pitched in, with FMM setting up its FMM Institute to upgrade workers’ soft skills, such as through management courses. It also provides six- to nine-month internships to school leavers to expose them to the working world.

Chief Minister Lim, noting that Singapore’s success stems from its talent pool and its ability to adapt to changes, said Penang is taking the same path.

Besides arming working adults with the necessary tools that will make them more relevant in a highly globalised world, the state is also targeting the young through Tech Dome Penang, which is scheduled to be operational by middle of this year. The tech dome is a hub for technology learning and the exchange of ideas, as well as a vehicle for improving scientific literacy and technological capability in Malaysia.

It is well known that Singapore’s model of governance has for many years been a source of inspiration not only for Penang, but for many developing countries, such as China, India and Hong Kong, according to analysts.

“The Singapore story is imbued with a strong narrative of building up this successful global city-state from ‘nothing’,” said Assistant Professor Woo Jun Jie from Nanyang Technological University’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences. “For this reason, we are particularly attractive to other city-states or small states that face similar physical-geographical limitations, as well as newly-reformed nation states such as Myanmar.”

He said many policy innovations that have marked Singapore’s development, such as the HDB housing model or high-grade reclaimed water NEWater, are of deep interest to countries experiencing social and environmental changes associated with urbanisation.

“Perhaps most important of all, Singapore’s record of clean government and low corruption is an inspiration to many developing states that are considering political reform,” Asst Prof Woo said.

The lure of property
Singaporeans are not just investing in Penang; many are also buying homes.

Up to 20 per cent of buyers in the state are foreigners, said Jerry Chan Fook Sing, chairman of the Penang branch of the Real Estate and Housing Developers’ Association Malaysia. Mr Chan reckons Singaporeans form the bulk of purchasers.

“People look at Penang as an investable location,” he told TODAY in an interview. “A lot of the Penang diaspora are in Singapore and they still have family ties here so they invest in property. Besides the slower pace of life in Penang, the Singapore dollar goes a long way, especially here.”

As prices rise, the state government, as Singapore has done, has introduced several cooling measures.

These include price caps for purchases by foreigners at RM2 million for landed property and RM1 million for stratified property, as well as moratoriums on the sale of affordable housing of five to 10 years from the date of purchase.

Penang has also adopted a programme similar to Singapore’s BCA (Building and Construction Authority) Green Mark scheme, with monetary incentives aimed at encouraging developers to build more environmentally friendly buildings.

Urban-planning solutions from Singapore
For Penangites, though, the issue is housing affordability. Under Lim’s leadership, Penang has engaged Singapore’s urban solutions firm Surbana International Consultants (SIC), formerly known as HDB Corporation. SIC (now part of Surbana Jurong) has been providing consultancy services for a massive public housing development in the state’s mainland strip of Batu Kawan, near the second bridge.

The move is part of the state’s plan to spur development in the mainland, said Chief Minister Lim, who pointed out that it was a “natural progression” due to land scarcity on the island.

The Penang branch of Malaysia’s predominant political party, the United Malays National Organisation (Umno), has criticised the hiring of a Singaporean firm, saying it was an insult to local developers who could do the job just as well. At the time, Lim replied that “the poor deserve a home and not a box for their children to grow up healthy and safe”.

The result is an affordable housing scheme built by the state’s development arm, Penang Development Corporation (PDC), in the township of Bandar Cassia, which, for the first time, uses Singapore’s public housing as a benchmark.

The project comprises 11,800 affordable apartment units costing between RM42,000 and RM400,000 per unit. The apartments are housed in nine- and 20-storey blocks on an 80ha site that has a carpark, shops, a football field and a recreational lake surrounded by lots of greenery.

Construction of phase one, comprising three apartment blocks, are currently at 60 per cent. Penang housing executive councillor Jagdeep Singh Deo told TODAY that 520 units of the apartments will be completed by the end of this year.

Another 520 units are expected to be completed by 2018, and the rest will be finished by 2019 onwards.

“We see their (Surbana’s) achievements, especially where the HDB is concerned, and therefore we invited them to come over, to gain exposure from their experience,” he said in an interview.

Because of the attractive price tags, the state received thousands of applications from interested buyers. The units are at least 30 per cent cheaper than similar ones sold by private developers or at the resale market.

Only those with a household income of between RM3,500 and RM10,000 a month are allowed to apply. Applicants also have to be registered Penang voters and working in the state.

These days, once-sleepy Batu Kawan is a hive of construction activity. Work has started on the site where Swedish furnishing giant Ikea is set to open an outlet in 2018 — the first outside Kuala Lumpur. Next to the Ikea site will be the upcoming Aspen Vision City, a mixed development that will include condominiums, office towers, an international school, a hospital, a 9.7ha park and an integrated central transportation hub.

The two projects are among several planned in Batu Kawan, including the RM1 billion Design Village Penang project consisting of a premier outlet shopping mall and a 300-room international class hotel.

For Hadi Yusoff, a sales executive who commutes 20 minutes daily from Batu Kawan to work on Penang island, the changes can’t come soon enough.

“Previously, when people talk about Penang, they refer only to the island, as if the mainland is a different state once you cross the Penang bridge,” he said.

“The big plans like Ikea and the transport hub will finally put the mainland on a par with the island.”

Development: The price to pay
Back on the island, though, Penang’s success has come at a price.

As property prices soar, Penang’s green hillslopes are being illegally cleared for more development — something recently highlighted by local newspapers. The price of living is rising and islanders are finding themselves more often than not sitting in traffic jams.

“It takes me 15 minutes longer to get to work nowadays, compared with about a year-and-a-half ago,” said human resources executive Susan Zachariah, who drives the 9km route from her house in Taman Brown to her office near Queensbay Mall, both on the east of the island. “Driving to town is also getting to be a nightmare. It used to take about 20 minutes, but now it is at least twice as long.”

To ease congestion, the state government has drawn up a RM27 billion Penang Transport Master Plan (PTMP), an integrated system that will feature light rail transit (LRT) and monorail lines, cable cars, buses, water taxis and ferries, apart from highways. It also includes a 2km undersea tunnel linking the island to the mainland.

The state government has been organising roundtables and town hall meetings on the plan to keep people updated. And yesterday, the Penang government said that relevant reports on the PTMP will be made public.

The PTMP is expected to take off by the end of year, if the federal government gives the green light.

That is a big “if”.

“PTMP is not just a game changer for Penang, it is a life changer for the people, ensuring prosperity and personal mobility for the next 50 years until 2065. If the federal government does not give approval, then it will have passed a death sentence to Penang,” Lim told TODAY.

While Lim is banking on the PTMP to give Penang a new lease of life, analysts contacted by TODAY said the state’s greatest challenges lie in the economic and political spheres.

“Penang’s biggest challenges are in the socio-economic and political realm. The first is how to stay ahead of the pack in attracting desirable and quality foreign investment and human capital, whilst resolving the island’s problems of overcrowding and traffic gridlock,” said Dr Lim Teck Ghee, director of the Centre for Policy Initiatives in Kuala Lumpur.

“The second is how to avoid being marginalised by an Umno-dominated BN (Barisan Nasional) government that will continue to use its federal power and resources clout to bring down the opposition,” he added.

University of Tasmania’s Asia Institute director James Chin concurred, saying that Penang is dependent on development funds dished out by the ruling federal government.

“There is only so much the state government can do, as the federal government controls the bulk of the funds. The important point is for Penang to show it can run the state government efficiently,” he said.