Has Tanjung Bungah development been in line with Penang Structure Plan?

The over-riding plan governing development in Penang is the Penang Structure Plan. Gazetted in 2007, it should be legally enforceable.

Tanjung Bungah landslide: Penang government, council must explain why DoE objection ignored

The Consumers’ Association of Penang (CAP), Sahabat Alam Malaysia (SAM) and the Tanjung Bungah Residents Association (TBRA) are shocked to learn that the Penang state government and the Penang Island City Council have chosen to ignore the objection of the Department of Environment (DoE) for siting the development of the residential project in Lembah Permai, Tanjung Bungah.

BFM Radio interview: Tanjung Bungah tragedy – who’s to blame?

This is the BFM interview with me on the Tanjung Bungah landslide traged ythat was aired at 8.30am today across the Klang Valley. See what you make of it.

At packed press conference, Penang NGOs call for wide-ranging independent probe on landslide tragedy

Civil society groups in Penang – Penang Forum (of which Aliran is part), the Consumers Association of Penang, Sahabat Alam Malaysia, and residents groups as well as environmental group Peka – turned up in full force at a packed press conference this morning to call for an end to all hill-slope development.

Tanjung Bungah landslide site was the very first case highlighted by Penang Hills Watch

Of the dozens of cases of hill clearing highlighted by Penang Hills Watch, the site of the disaster this morning was the first in a series of dozens of cases brought to the attention of local authorities earlier this year.

Landslide at Tanjung Bungah – this time no rainfall (updated)

A landslide has struck Tanjung Bungah somewhere in the hills near Lorong Lembah Permai 3 in Tanjung Bungah not far from TAR College at around 8.30am today.

Unleash the writer within you! A young writers’ workshop

Aliran invites young people aged 18 to 35 to participate in our Young Writers Workshop with the theme “Youth aspirations and the 14th general election” this weekend 21-22 October 2017 in Penang.

24 residents’ groups issue wake-up call to resolve Penang’s flood problems

This statement was released today by a couple of dozen residents’ group from all over Penang Island in the wake of the worst floods in recent times: Alarmed by the impact of the recent floods that hit Penang on 15 September 2017, several residents associations and community representatives have gathered together to make a collective call to the state government of Penang and their elected representatives to, this time, take the situation of rainfall, floods and hill erosion very seriously.

Anti-kleptocracy rally: Mahathir outlines Pakatan’s action plan if it wins power

Mahathir pledges that Pakatan would do five things after winning power at the general election:
  • Catch M01 and his cohorts.
  • Set up a royal commission of inquiry to probe the siphoning of public funds via 1MDB and Felda.
  • Set up an independent body to recover public assets and money stolen or siphoned off through corruption.
  • Make the MACC an independent body that reports directly to Parliament.
  • Abolish direct negotiations for government contracts.
Pakatan pledges to eradicate corruption for the good of the country, adds Mahathir, and make it among the country among the 10 cleanest nations in the world. The billions lost through 1MDB, for instance, could have built 460,000 low-cost homes, provided free education or built 50 hospitals. Estimated crowd by one eyewitness earlier in the night: up to 8,000. Blog visitor PolitiScheiss, who was there after 8pm, puts the figure at 20,000-30,000. Rally organisers say 25,000. Another friend at the rally says it was unlikely to be 25,000, maybe 10,000-15,000. Perhaps slightly below expectations. The “boring” football match between Liverpool and Manchester United may have affected the turnout at the rally. Or in this age of social media, many could have been content to follow the event on social media, having already decided whom to vote for. But blog visitor Khun Pana wonders: Are those five “pledges” sufficient to secure votes? As it is, it all seems to be limited to anti MO1 and nothing for the commoners. And if the Pakatan group wins power to form the federal government, will they push forward with the IPCMC (police reforms), local city/town elections, reforms to education, and a secular Malaysia or even with a simple thing like bringing down public transport fares. Or will it continue to run (the government) just like the BN did? It needs to convince the new voters and change their mindset. PolitiScheiss concurs: … the speakers were too heavy on condemnations of corruption, kleptocracy, the 1MDB issue.. and shouts of “Reformasi!” instead of saying more about how a Pakatan government, if elected, will deal with issues such as the rising cost of living, unaffordable housing prices, public transit, declining education standards, affordable public healthcare, the problem of flash floods, environmental degradation and so forth. Yes, if Pakatan wants to capture public imagination, it should go beyond wiping out corruption and tell us how it can improve the people’s overall wellbeing and quality of life.

Packing them into the Penang Hill Railway trains

Yesterday, 11.30am Penang Hill at the summit waiting inside the train to go downhill.

What is stopping more Penangites from taking the bus and cycling?

Independent film producer, Andrew Ng Yew Fan, one of three winners of the Freedom Film Fest’s Malaysia Film Grants awards, decided to take the bus in Penang. He shares his experience with us. And this was his experience cycling from Jelutong to Komtar together with activist Que Lin: This is a more leisurely ride along the coastal bicycle lane from George Town to Queensbay: So what would it take for you to catch a bus or cycle to work in Penang?

Caped campaigner Mahathir addresses Tian Chua vigil, calls for ‘change of government’

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s Mahathir speaking at a solidarity vigil for Tian Chua outside the latter’s office along Jalan Sentul in KL on 7 October 2017.

First, storm lashes Pas assembly; now lightning disrupts major Pas gathering

Just five months after a thunderstorm wreaked havoc at a Pas annual assembly in Alor Star, lightning struck during a ceramah at a major Pas gathering, ‘Fastaqim 2.0’, in Pantai Tok Jembal, Kuala Nerus in Terengganu on 29 September.

Art from the periphery – an antidote to materialistic capitalism

A Mixed Group Exhibition is being held at the Hin Bus Depot Art Centre along Jalan Gurdwara in Penang until 10 October.

Enchanting lights illuminate the night during cancer awareness-raising event

Over a thousand people gathered at USM last night for the launch of the Relay for Life in Penang to support raising awareness of the fight against cancer.

The changing face of the Tanjung Tokong coastline

This is the changing face of Penang Island along the northeastern coastline off Tanjung Tokong – part of phase 2 of the Seri Tanjung Pinang project undertaken by E & 0.

Safe cycling lanes: If Vancouver can do it….

Notice that these are dedicated – and protected – bicycle lanes. Protected bicycle lanes are probably what it would take to enhance public confidence in the safety of cycling in places like Penang, KL, Ipoh and JB.

3,000-strong crowd lap up Mahathir’s address in Kuching

A crowd of 3,000 turned up at the BDC Everise Supermarket car-park to listen to Mahathir’s long-awaited ceramah in Kuching.

Pas in dreamland?

So Pas wants to contest in 100 seats, with the goal of winning 40 seats. Pas secretary general Takiyuddin Hassan says the party has a better chance in urban areas due to what he thinks is growing acceptance by urban residents. Well, he is entitled to his opinion. But I think he is being overoptimistic or maybe even dreaming. The main reason Pas did well in urban areas was that it was part of an opposition coalition at a time when many urban folk rejected the BN. This time around, the party may say it is not tied to any coalition – which many will find hard to swallow. Certainly Pas has a perception problem: many already view the party as friendly with or aligned to the BN. If that is the case, three questions arise:
  • Will urban voters really back them this times around – when many are already disgruntled with the BN and now wary of Pas’ conservative streak ie focusing on issues of personal morality while seemingly overlooking the critical issues facing the nation?
  • If Pas is involved in three-cornered contests, how realistic is Takiyuddin’s goal of winning 40 seats, especially when many urban voter will see the as party as ‘spoilers’?
  • Will it end up being a regional party again confined to the East Coast?
Perhaps the real Pas goal is what one of its leaders suggested – to win enough seats to be the ‘king-maker’ in the event Pakatan and BN both come close to winning without an overwhelming majority.

Has Pakatan done enough to persuade rural voters to ditch Umno?

Most people realise that the only way Pakatan Harapan can reach Putrajaya is if there is a swing among rural voters – and voters in Sabah and Sarawak – from Umno-BN-Pas to the opposition.