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Author: atira

[Jenayah] SR, Wall Street Journal berterusan memfitnah Najib- PANAS! bukti dah keluar

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Post time 7-7-2015 09:00 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
pengasas ambank tu masih aktif lgik ke dalam ambank? atau saham dh org lain amik alih? die x de kaitan pape??
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:18 PM | Show all posts
Rosmah dh packing barang agaknyee nak nyorok kat negara tan tan tan tu..duk umah besan barangkali
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 Author| Post time 7-7-2015 09:19 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:19 PM | Show all posts

Tp bape saat je kan
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:22 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
nenekglamer replied at 7-7-2015 08:09 PM
Aku ada soklan bodoh ni..

Kalau la pokjib ni disabitkan salah, dia masih boleh digelar 'tun' ke  ...

Tun tu bukan otomatik pencen pm terus boleh pakai tun... tu anugerah agong bagi pada pemimpin2 tertinggi negara yg banyak jasa.... kalo dah pakcik jibby ni masuk jel, takkan la agong nak anugerah tun kat pengkhianat negara lak...silap2 dato seri dia tu pun kena tarik balik jadi encik najib dan puan rosmah mansor...
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:23 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
ultra78 replied at 7-7-2015 08:29 PM
Kalau rancang baik, tak adalah bank in dalam akaun peribadi

dia kan power boleh control and conquere semua nya..mesti dia fikir takde sapa pun expect dia buat macam ni...akhirnya sapa sangka benda ni boleh terjadi..hehehe
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:26 PM | Show all posts

So tv3 dah umum najib nak saman ker tidak? Dah lama tak tengok tv3... nak muntah bila dengar pembaca berita dia sampaikan berita
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:27 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Negara china pun kalah kt kerajaan ameno dlm bab2 songlap, rasuah, penyalahgunaan kuasa
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 Author| Post time 7-7-2015 09:29 PM | Show all posts
scorpionkiki replied at 7-7-2015 09:26 PM
So tv3 dah umum najib nak saman ker tidak? Dah lama tak tengok tv3... nak muntah bila dengar pemba ...

ntah la...
dah bertahun tak nonton tv3
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:29 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
tangkap Jho Low dulu! jangan kasi lepas! die gemok gedempoll, tak jauh lari. senang nak tangkap
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:31 PM | Show all posts
atira replied at 7-7-2015 09:29 PM
ntah la...
dah bertahun tak nonton tv3

Kalau camtu...terpaksalah terus mengadap forum cari .. kat sini cepat saja information msuk
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 Author| Post time 7-7-2015 09:43 PM | Show all posts
scorpionkiki replied at 7-7-2015 09:31 PM
Kalau camtu...terpaksalah terus mengadap forum cari .. kat sini cepat saja information msuk

dgn fb.. update kat fb pon cepat.. lagi cepat dari tv3 suku
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:50 PM | Show all posts
taikor replied at 7-7-2015 09:29 PM
tangkap Jho Low dulu! jangan kasi lepas! die gemok gedempoll, tak jauh lari. senang nak tangkap

Tebar jala ikan je
Tak gerak ke mana dah
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:54 PM | Show all posts
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:55 PM | Show all posts
atira replied at 7-7-2015 09:43 PM
dgn fb.. update kat fb pon cepat.. lagi cepat dari tv3 suku

senyap je TV3Suku.. Utusan Meloya online pun pandang sepi news ni...
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:55 PM | Show all posts


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Post time 7-7-2015 09:58 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Yg akak nampak, dari kerajaan, masuk 1mdb, masuk pulak syarikat lain, masuk lagi berputar akaun lain, pastu bukak akaun personal, sumbat semua duit dlm akaun tu.. bawak keluar duit dan tutup akaun.. dah cuci duit tu semua...

Esok pegi rasmi majlis, ceramah depan hadirin paksa rela hadir ckp malaysia boleh bangkrup kalau tak kenakan cukai ni.. tak naikkan harga barang tu...
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Post time 7-7-2015 09:59 PM | Show all posts
Edited by amansihat at 7-7-2015 10:01 PM

Japan PM Naoto Kan announces resignation amid criticism
26 August 2011
From the section Asia-Pacific   comments
Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue.
Media caption
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan making his announcement
Japan's beleaguered Prime Minister Naoto Kan has announced his resignation, clearing the way for the country's sixth leader in five years.
Mr Kan has been criticised for failing to show leadership after the devastating 11 March earthquake and tsunami, and ensuing nuclear crisis.
In June, Mr Kan pledged to quit if parliament passed three key pieces of legislation, which it did on Friday.
The ruling Democratic Party of Japan will choose a new leader on Monday.
Mr Kan's successor as party head will almost certainly become Japan's next prime minister.
Challenges ahead
Mr Kan announced his decision to stand down at a DPJ meeting, which was broadcast to the nation. He is expected to give a news conference later on Friday.
Looking back on nearly 15 months in office, Mr Kan said he had done all he could given the difficulties he faced, including the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster and political infighting - including within his own party.
Japan's revolving door

Naoto Kan (Jun 10-Aug 11) Lost support over handling of earthquake aftermath
Yukio Hatoyama (Sep 09-Jun 10) Failed to keep election promise on Okinawa US base
Taro Aso (Sep 08-Sep 09) Famed for verbal gaffes, lost election
Yasuo Fukuda (Sep 07-Sep 08) Struggled to pass laws, after DPJ took control of upper house
Shinzo Abe (Sep 06-Sep 07) Unpopular government hit by scandal
Which way forward for Japan?
Gaffe-prone politicians
"Under the severe circumstances, I feel I've done everything that I had to do," he said. "Now I would like to see you choose someone respectable as a new prime minister."
The 64-year-old's resignation had been widely expected, and comes amid tumbling public support.
On 2 June he won a no confidence vote in the Diet (parliament), only by making a promise to step down at a future date.
The Diet passed the final two bills out of three earlier on Friday - one on the budget, the other promoting renewable energy - which he had set as a condition for his departure.
The BBC's Roland Buerk in Tokyo says the new prime minister will have to oversee the biggest reconstruction effort in Japan since WWII and resolve the nuclear crisis at Fukushima where reactors are still leaking radiation.
They will also have to persuade the markets that Japan can overcome a divided parliament to address the biggest national debt in the industrialised world, our correspondent says.
Seiji Maehara, a hawk on China who argues for pursuing growth before raising taxes to restore the nation's fiscal health, is favourite among the public.
But the decision will be made by the governing party's Diet members.
Reports in Japan say Ichiro Ozawa, who leads the biggest faction despite the suspension of his party membership over a political funding scandal, is unlikely to support the former foreign minister.
Other possible successors include Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda and Trade Minister Banri Kaieda.
Slow recovery
The twin natural disasters claimed more than 15,700 lives, and more than 4,500 people remain unaccounted for. Survivors in Japan's devastated north-east have complained about slow recovery efforts.
The resulting crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi plant is the world's worst nuclear accident in a generation.
Three of the six reactors melted down after the tsunami and 9.0-magnitude quake wrecked cooling systems.
The opposition and many in Mr Kan's own party said he failed to show leadership in the crisis, and was too slow in acknowledging the severity of the disaster.
The crisis also revealed serious flaws in the nuclear industry's regulatory systems and safety standards.
Workers are continuing to bring the plant to a cold shutdown by January.
However, nearly six months on many of the 80,000 people who were evacuated from the area are living in temporary housing or shelters, with no indication of when or if they will be able to return home.
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Post time 7-7-2015 10:00 PM | Show all posts
The Resignation of Two Ministers Spells Trouble for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
Kirk Spitzer  Oct. 20, 2014     
Japan minister resigns
Photo by The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images
Japanese Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi resigned on Oct. 20 amid allegations of misusing election funds
More ministers could fall as Japan faces political instability at the worst time


A businessman walk past an electronic stock board in Tokyo, Oct. 1, 2014.
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It must have seemed like a good idea at the time.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appointed five women to his Cabinet last month in a major shakeup designed to show support for female empowerment and help smooth the way for an unpopular political agenda. But all that unraveled Monday with the abrupt resignation of two of those appointees—Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi and Justice Minister Midori Matsushima—for campaign spending violations.

The controversies could not have come at a worse time for Abe. His economic policies are faltering and his Cabinet approval ratings had dropped below 50 percent even before the spending scandal broke last week. Abe faces tough decisions within the next few months on policy issues ranging from restarting nuclear reactors to imposing a second round of tax hikes. He’s also struggling to repair relations with China and South Korea over historical issues and territorial disputes, even as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Beijing next month looms.

“Abe no longer seems the invincible Superman that some had imagined, and that weakens him both domestically and in Japan’s diplomatic dealings,” says Jeff Kingston, director of Asian Studies at Temple University Japan. “On all of his signature policies — ranging from nuclear reactor re-starts to arms exports, collective self defense and state secrecy legislation—a majority of the public is opposed.”

Trade Minister Obuchi and Justice Minister Matsushima submitted their resignations Monday. They were the first Cabinet members to step down since Abe took office in December 2012—a remarkable period of stability in Japanese politics, where ministers not infrequently are called upon to fall on their sword. It was also a reminder of Abe’s scandal-plagued and inefficient first term in 2006-7, which ended after barely a year. A pension records scandal and the suicide of his agriculture minister during an expense-spending probe, along with poor health for the Prime Minister himself, helped doom Abe’s first go-around.

Obuchi, 40, was accused of funneling campaign money to her sister and brother-in-law and to improperly subsidizing entertainment junkets for supporters. Matsushima stepped down for improperly distributing more than $100,000 worth of paper fans to constituents. Obuchi’s resignation in particular could be a major loss for Abe and the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. A telegenic mother of two, Obuchi had been expected to help Abe with the controversial restart of Japan’s nuclear power plants—a wide majority of the public remains opposed to atomic energy—shut down since the Fukushima disaster in 2011.

Obuchi’s portfolio includes authority over the nation’s nuclear power plants and her softer image—a young mother, after all—was expected to soothe public anxiety over plans to restart the reactors. Obuchi is the daughter of former Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, who ran Japan from July 1998 to April 2000, and had even been touted as a possible successor to Abe somewhere down the road. But the close scrutiny that comes with a Cabinet appointment exposed her as a political lightweight and a product of the LDP machine, says Michael Cucek, a researcher and author of a respected political blog in Tokyo. “She represents someone who vaulted into prominence by the death of a sitting prime minister, taking over the family business without ever knowing much about how the whole machine works,” he said.

And that may not be the end of it. The remaining three female appointees have drawn heavy criticism, or worse, for alleged connections to neo-Nazi or right-wing fringe organizations, or for visiting the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine. A 2011 photo of Internal Affairs Minister Sanae Takaichi posing with the leader of the National Socialist Japanese Workers Party was discovered on the group’s website shortly after Takaichi’s appointment last month. Postings on Yamada’s blog seem to profess admiration for Adolf Hitler, and videos posted on the website show Yamada and group members wearing stylized swastikas. Takaichi said she was unaware of Yamada’s affiliation when the photo was taken and that it had been posted to the group’s website without her knowledge. She said she asked for the photo to be removed as soon as she learned of it, and that the group complied.

Similarly, a 2009 photo of National Public Safety Commission chief Eriko Yamatani posing with the members of the far- as Zaitokukai group, which has mounted virulent street demonstrations and hate speeches against ethnic Koreans and other foreigners living in Japan. Yamatani also said she was unaware that her photo had been taken with members of the group or that it had been posted online. She said it was taken down at her request after she learned of it.

On Saturday, all the three of the remaining female Cabinet appointees made formal visits to Yasukuni, where 14 convicted “Class A” war criminals—leaders of wartime Japan—are enshrined. That drew a rebuke from China, which remains deeply skeptical of Abe’s revisionist views of history. That visit will complicate Abe’s efforts to repair relations with Japan’s neighbors—and maybe its citizens, says Kingston. “I think there is a great wave of schadenfreude sweeping across East Asia as Abe’s gathering woes weaken his political standing. The Japanese public, too, are happy to see the Abe juggernaut sputtering as Abenomics fizzles and his culture war to redefine national identity backfires.”

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Post time 7-7-2015 10:02 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
WSJ dh tunjuk bukti..... xkn denial dgn air liur je ckp fitnah.... kata hr nih nk p saman WSJ.... poyo lah...Penyokongbijan mana.... senyap je... xkn terkedu dah kot.... buat2 x nampak
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