Kuala Lumpur

Malay Indian dancer wins trip to Mumbai

Kuala Lumpur, Jan. 18 : A Malay Indian, who started out as a bharat natyam dancer at 11, has won a ticket to Mumbai for winning the Siva Gopal Award here.

Prakash Kandasamy, a father of two, recalls he was also studying tabla under Suresh Ramachandran back in 1989 "because the school needed more male students".

He told the New Strait Times, that his fascination for the arts perked up during a fortnight-long visit to Malaysia by Ustad Usman Khan, the grandson of Ustad Rehmat Khan of Dharwadis, the man credited with turning the three-stringed sitar into the seven-stringed instrument of today.

Piracy watchdog records unprecedented jump in sea attacks

Kuala Lumpur - Global seafarers faced an alarming rise in pirate attacks last year, with an unprecedented 49 ships beings seized and 889 crew members held for ransom, a maritime watchdog said Friday.

A total of 293 attacks were recorded in 2008, from 263 recorded in the previous year, the London-based International Maritime Bureau (IMB) said in its yearly report from its reporting center in Kuala Lumpur.

It also noted a surge in the number of violent attacks last year.

A total 46 vessels were fired upon, 32 crew members injured, 11 killed, 21 missing and presumed dead, the report said. The number of incidents in which guns were used nearly doubled from 72 in 2007 to 139 last year.

Commonwealth group calls for pardon for illegal Indians in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, Jan. 15 : The Commonwealth International Peace Tribunal has urged Malaysia to pardon illegal Indian nationals.

The Star and the Malaysia Nanban quoted its president Selvam Parimanan, who is visiting Malaysia, as saying that he would send a memorandum on the matter to Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and meet political leaders to discuss the problem.

Parimanan, who is Commonwealth Indian Lawyers Council president, said he was told that more than 80,000 Indian nationals were working in Malaysia in various sectors, and of them, about 30 percent were working illegally.

Dog owners need neighbours' approval in Malaysian town

Dog owners need neighbours' approval in Malaysian town Kuala Lumpur  - Dog owners in a central Malaysian district must now obtain a written permission from their neighbours in order to keep their pets, a newspaper report said Thursday.

The ruling by the city council in the central state of Negeri Sembilan was aimed at ensuring that pet dogs were not a nuisance to neighbours, said council president Abdul Halim Abdul Latif.

"The pets cannot be allowed to roam freely outside their compound," he was quoted as saying by the Star daily.

Pak says terror allegations aimed at maligning our nation

Malay body compiles book on sermon guidelines for Hindu temples

Kuala Lumpur, Jan. 14 : The Malaysia Hindu Sangam (MHS) has compiled a book to serve as a guideline in delivering sermons in temples all over the nation, with emphasis on national unity.

Titled 52 Velli Sinthanai Manikal (Virtuous Thoughts for 52 Fridays), the book is to be utilized by temples delivering sermons on Friday evenings, reports The Star.

The book was compiled in line with Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's call for all religious institutions to play a proactive role in strengthening national unity.

MHS chairman Datuk A. Vaithilingam said the book has already been distributed to all temples.

The book can also be obtained from MHS at 63 Jalan Yusof Shahbudin 16, Taman Sentosa, 41200 Klang, Selangor.

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