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Author: the_killer

[Jenayah] Game Over Najib hahahahah..wak yidin akui duit masuk akaun najib

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Post time 31-7-2015 11:39 PM | Show all posts
rashiman replied at 31-7-2015 11:02 PM
memanglah bangang jika saja2 nak bagi...macam Najib...mungkin jutawan arab nie suka sangat dgn Mal ...

Mungkin... Kalau... Mungkin... Hello 2.6 billion k... Membantu konon .... Puiiiiiiit
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Post time 31-7-2015 11:42 PM | Show all posts
xAthenax posted on 31-7-2015 11:37 PM
PAC di tubuhkan utk apa macai sekalian?

Untuk tangkap peon dan dispatch boys............


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Post time 31-7-2015 11:45 PM | Show all posts
mzzenma replied at 31-7-2015 02:17 PM
bawa masuk funder konon tapi habuk pun tak ada
hasil gst pun nan hado
kemudahan utk rakyat duk tak ...

hi mzz
kucing awak nama kembang tu sehat tak???

bangkem kembang bangkem kembang
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Post time 1-8-2015 12:04 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Baekk giler org arab bg berbilion kt bijan free cmtu jer....mmg x msuk dek akal kalo ikut lojik.....

Tp kalo ade yg caye mmg otak kt jubo laaaa
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Post time 1-8-2015 12:22 AM | Show all posts
orangpluto replied at 1-8-2015 12:04 AM
Baekk giler org arab bg berbilion kt bijan free cmtu jer....mmg x msuk dek akal kalo ikut lojik..... ...


mana boleh hanya percaya 100% ikut lojik semata-mata...

adakalanya ...perkara yang tak logik...itu yg sebenarnya yg berlaku...

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Post time 1-8-2015 08:10 AM | Show all posts
NAT_11 replied at 31-7-2015 11:30 PM
Yes...yes I agree totally with u.
Lepas ni jangan komplen taw, kalau duit berbillion masok dalam
...

Sebab itu, kadang2 kita x hairan, mcm mana pbangkang boleh keluarnegeri selalu, kadang2 guna private jet,
Buat perhimpunan besar-besaran, bagi elaun kpd peserta,bagi tshirt kuning dll.
Dari mana sumber dana mereka...
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Post time 1-8-2015 08:15 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Kesian kn peon dgn macai tu...

Berapa billion agaknya dlm akaun mereka2...
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Post time 1-8-2015 08:17 AM | Show all posts
rashiman posted on 1-8-2015 08:10 AM
Sebab itu, kadang2 kita x hairan, mcm mana pbangkang boleh keluarnegeri selalu, kadang2 guna priva ...

Masing-masing ada penderma yang ikhls, tak perlu dipersoalkan.
Sekarang, dengan 2.67 billion masok stret ke dalam akaun Najib
oleh penderma Erab, sume orang tak perlu berselindung lagi dah.
Tak perlu nak malu-malu asam. Atau malu-malu kucing.
Boleh terus terang menderma ke dalam akaun pribadi pemimpin,
tak kira pemimpin kerajaan atau pembangkang.
Bak kata pepatah, lulus jarum, lulus kelindan.........
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:15 AM | Show all posts
NAT_11 replied at 31-7-2015 11:30 PM
Yes...yes I agree totally with u.
Lepas ni jangan komplen taw, kalau duit berbillion masok dalam
...

Aku tak dapat bayangkan kalau duit yahudi nasrani zionis masuk dalam akaun bang non..... utusan dan tv3 akan canang benda ni siang dan malam.... mai kat najib, tak palah...sbb dia baik banyak membantu.... apa yg najib bantu negara lain pun tak tau..... handle kapal terbang jatuh pun memalukan
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:20 AM | Show all posts
Slush Fund Scandal Rocks Turkish Coalition
By Alistair BellMay. 14 1996 00:00
ANKARA -- A scandal over $6.5 million missing from a secret government slush fund rocked Turkey's conservative coalition Monday, which was already reeling from infighting over a string of corruption charges.


A cabinet member accused Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz of trying to discredit coalition partner Tansu Ciller by revealing to the press details of her use of the fund during her recent term as premier.


"Only the prime minister or his adviser has access to this kind of secret document. It couldn't have come from a third person," Yalim Erez, the trade and industry minister and a close Ciller confidante, said.


Yilmaz has not commented on the allegation.


Turkish newspapers at the weekend gave wide coverage to a leaked document purporting to show that Ciller had taken $6.5 million from the fund, intended mostly for shadowy security operations, a couple of weeks before she handed over power to Yilmaz in March.


The two conservative leaders have been at loggerheads recently over Yilmaz's backing for parliamentary probes into corruption charges against Ciller.


An increasingly beleaguered Ciller has acknowledged delving into the fund but says interests of national security prevent her from divulging what she did with the money.


She suggested it may have gone toward the fight against Kurdish rebels or security activities involving Turkey's neighbors.


"Look at terrorism. Look around us at Iran, Azerbaijan, Chechnya and Greece," Ciller was quoted by the Turkish press as saying to justify her withdrawal of the cash.


Ciller's True Path Party has gone to the verge of quitting the coalition twice in as many weeks after Yilmaz's Motherland Party helped the Islamist opposition set up two separate corruption inquiries against her. Ciller, Turkey's first woman leader, says the charges are a bid to ruin her hopes of becoming prime minister again next year under a power-sharing deal with Yilmaz.


"The prime minister should either resign or open an investigation after secrets of this degree have come to light," minister Erez said.


A security court will investigate how the press got hold of the slush fund document that clearly shows Ciller vouching for the money under "secret service expenditures."


"Giving away state secrets is a crime according to the law. One of my colleagues is investigating and action will be taken if necessary," said Cevdet Volkan, the chief prosecutor at Ankara state security court.


He refused to say if the court, which usually tries Kurdish separatists or left-wing militants, would look into claims that Yilmaz was behind the leak.


The conservatives also have fought over appointments and the economy.
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:22 AM | Show all posts
MacArthur Foundation Closes Russian Office Amid NGO ‘Witch Hunt'
Bloomberg By Henry Meyer
July 22, 2015 4:23 AM
????

The MacArthur Foundation, a U.S. non-profit organization, is closing its Moscow office after nearly a quarter century after Russian lawmakers branded it a threat to the country.

The Chicago-based fund said that it was forced to end its presence in Russia after the Federation Council, the upper house of parliament, included it on a “patriotic stop-list” of groups recommended for designation as “undesirable” by the government. The action followed a series of laws targeting foreign-funded non-government organizations.

The measures “make it clear that the Russian government regards MacArthur’s continued presence as unwelcome,” the foundation’s president Julia Stasch said in a website statement on Wednesday.

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As Russia struggles with its first recession in six years, the Kremlin is accelerating a clampdown on civil society that began after nationwide political protests against Vladimir Putin in 2011 and 2012, the biggest since he was first elected president in 2000. The Kremlin has accused the U.S. and Europe of funding uprisings in former Soviet allies, including Ukraine, through NGOs.

Since Putin’s return to the presidency in 2012 elections, the state has required groups that accept financing from abroad to register as “foreign agents” and subjected them to harsher regulation. The Federation Council voted on July 8 to send its blacklist of 12 foreign NGOs to Russia’s prosecutor general, the Foreign Ministry and the Justice Ministry, asking them to label the organizations, which also include George Soros’ Open Society Foundations and the National Endowment for Democracy, as “undesirable.”

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Hostility, Fear
In May, a law came into effect that allows prosecutors to deem foreign NGOs as “undesirable” if they are considered to “threaten Russia’s constitutional order, defense potential or security.” Such organizations lose rights to publish media materials, organize rallies and use local bank accounts.

The stop list is “an important part of the witch hunt against critics of the government by creating a climate of hostility, fear and suspicion,” Tanya Lokshina, Human Rights Watch Russia Program Director, said on the group’s website.

More from Bloomberg.com: The Scandal That Ate Malaysia

Since 1992, the MacArthur Foundation has distributed more than $173 million in grants in Russia to promote higher education, human rights and limit proliferation of weapons, it said.

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Post time 1-8-2015 09:24 AM | Show all posts
Political fund problem hits Japanese PM
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2015-03-03 10:16
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Political fund problem hits Japanese PM
Japan's Prime Minister and the leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), Shinzo Abe, points to a reporter during a news conference following a victory in the lower house elections by his ruling coalition, at the LDP headquarters in Tokyo, in this December 15, 2014 file photo. [Photo/Agencies]

TOKYO -- A local chapter headed by President of Japan's ruling Democratic Party (LDP) Shinzo Abe, who is also Japan's prime minister, has been found receiving donations within one year from two firms after they were selected for government subsidies, according to local media early on Tuesday.

The Yamaguchi No. 4 LDP chapter received 120,000 yen (about $1, 000) in 2012 from a chemical product company based in Osaka, and 500,000 yen (about $4,160) in 2013 from Ube Industries Ltd. in Tokyo, Japan's Kyodo News quoted political funds reports late Monday.

The two companies were selected to get government subsidies respectively in 2012 and 2013, said a local bureau of the Japanese Industry Ministry.

Japan's political funds control law bans companies from making political donations within a year after them being noticed to get government's subsidies.

The problem involving the prime minister follows a series of political fund scandals that trapped several ministers of Abe's cabinet.

Agriculture Minister Koya Nishikawa stepped down due to similar problems with Abe last week and Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura allegedly received supports from groups outside his constituency and the groups are not registered as political organizations.

Last year, two female Japanese ministers, representatives of Abe's "womenomincs," resigned due to political funds problems and the resignations also partially triggered Abe to dissolve the lower house and called a snap general election.

Then Trade Minister Yuko Obuchi and then Justice Minister Midori Matsushima quitted their posts for misuse of political funds, only one month after their appointments in a cabinet reshuffle.

While, political fund report of Yoichi Miyazawa, the successor of Obuchi, was also found spending of 18,230 yen for sadomasochism sex show in a bar in Hiroshima and Miyazawa, who also involved in other allegations, not resigned.

In the general election in December, the scandal-hit ministers, including Obuchi, Matsushima and Miyazawa, secured their seats in the lower house.
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:26 AM | Show all posts
Japan's trade minister apologises over reports political funds misused
TOKYO | BY LINDA SIEG
Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi leaves the upper house of parliament in Tokyo September 29, 2014. REUTERS/Yuya Shino
Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yuko Obuchi leaves the upper house of parliament in Tokyo September 29, 2014.
REUTERS/YUYA SHINO
In a blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, his newly appointed trade minister was ensnared in controversy on Thursday after reports that her political funds were spent buying theatre tickets for supporters and goods from relatives' businesses.

Abe picked Yuko Obuchi, the 40-year-old daughter of a former prime minister, to head the powerful ministry of economy, trade and industry (METI) in a cabinet reshuffle in early September. She was among five women given top jobs, as Abe sought to bolster his government's popularity with voters.

Regarded as a possible future contender to become Japan's first woman premier, Obuchi apologised at a parliamentary panel for the controversy after the reports of misuse of funds, possibly violating electoral and political funding laws, hit the news-stands on Thursday.

"I apologise from the bottom of my heart for the fuss created by my private matter," Obuchi said in response to questions at a panel in the upper house of parliament.

The weekly magazine Shukan Shincho reported that two political support groups in Obuchi's constituency had spent some 26 million yen (245,600 dollars) on theatre tickets for her backers in 2010 and 2011. Major newspapers also followed up on the allegations made by the magazine.

The Mainichi newspaper also said Obuchi's political funding oversight body had spent about 3.6 million yen over five years from 2008 at a clothing shop run by her sister's husband and a design office run by her sister, raising more questions.

Obuchi said that she had instructed the political groups to investigate the matter, adding she believed the payments to her sister's shop fell within the scope of political activities but that further checks would be made.

TASKED WITH WINNING PUBLIC'S TRUST

Obuchi also said she believes her supporters had paid for the theatre events themselves but was aware it would be a violation of the law if her political groups made additional payments, Kyodo news agency reported.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference on Thursday that he expected Obuchi would provide an explanation before too long.

After her appointment, Obuchi was given the tough task of trying to gain public trust for the government's unpopular policy of restarting nuclear reactors following the 2011 Fukushima atomic disaster.

Abe had hoped the telegenic mother of two would be able to ease opposition, but the controversy around her could hinder the governments plan for restarting the reactors, according to some political analysts.

"If this damages Obuchi, the ‘Obuchi effect’ will disappear. The hurdle for restarts will get higher,” said independent political analyst Atsuo Ito.

"I don’t think she will have to resign. But for sure, this is damaging to Abe’s image," Ito added.

The ruling coalition has a hefty majority in parliament, but the opposition Democratic Party has been targeting new cabinet ministers in parliamentary debate in hopes of denting Abe's popularity, still relatively robust at around 50 percent.

Abe's first brief tenure as prime minister in 2006-2007 was marked by scandals among his cabinet members, several of whom were forced to resign, but after his return to office in December 2012, his first cabinet was relatively scandal-free.

(A
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:27 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Awat masuk berita jepun pulak..jepun tu kapir xpela dieorg nak buat pe
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:28 AM | Show all posts
Education minister disputes report of political fund transgression
February 26, 2015

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
Education minister Hakubun Shimomura on Feb. 26 denied receiving financial donations from groups not officially registered as political organizations, saying he has no knowledge about the activities of such groups.

However, sources and opposition politicians say the Cabinet minister must be familiar with the groups known as Hakuyukai (Organization of friends of Hakubun Shimomura).

Under the Political Fund Control Law, a political group is defined as “an organization that has as its primary objective endorsing or supporting a candidate for a specific public office." Donations from unregistered groups are a violation of the law.

Opposition party members hammered Shimomura at the Lower House Budget Committee on Feb. 26, after the Shukan Bunshun weekly magazine that went on sale the same day reported that several unregistered organizations invited Shimomura to speak at their gatherings.

According to the magazine, the groups donated membership fees to the electoral district branch of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party headed by Shimomura.

“There were no donations or the purchase of tickets to fund-raising parties,” Shimomura said at the Diet.

Hakuyukai members are connected to educational institutions and cram schools.

According to Shimomura, one Hakuyukai registered with the Tokyo metropolitan government’s Election Administration Commission is a political organization.

However, he said six other Hakuyukai groups exist in various parts of Japan.

“I have absolutely no knowledge of the specific details about the management (of those six groups), including financial aspects,” Shimomura said Feb. 26. “Because members have asked me to make an appearance, I have participated in annual meetings.”

Shimomura added that the six regional Hakuyukai had no connection with his own political activities.

However, a man who described himself as the chairman of Hakuyukai in the Kinki region raised doubts about Shimomura’s remarks.

“We hold annual fund-raising parties for Shimomura,” he told The Asahi Shimbun. “We have also asked members to donate 120,000 yen ($1,000) each to the LDP branch for the Tokyo No. 11 electoral district (which Shimomura heads).”

At the Feb. 26 Lower House Budget Committee session, Michiyoshi Yunoki of the main opposition Democratic Party of Japan held up what he said was a copy of the rules and regulations for the Hakuyukai group for the Chugoku and Shikoku regions in western Japan.

He said the document states that one objective of the group is to “support the political activities of Shimomura.”

Yunoki said that provision meant the group should have registered as a political organization.

THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
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Post time 1-8-2015 09:31 AM | Show all posts
OMEINTERNATIONAL
WEDNESDAY, 29 JULY, 2015 | 07:36 WIB
Malaysian PM Axes Deputy, Attorney General Amid Fund Scandal
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TEMPO.CO, Kuala Lumpur - Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, stung by allegations that he received some $700 million in government money, on Tuesday fired the attorney general who had been investigating him and a deputy who has been among his most prominent critics.

Najib is under increasing pressure over leaked confidential documents that allegedly show the money, from state investment fund 1MDB, went into his personal accounts.

Najib announced over national television that his deputy Muhyiddin Yassin will be replaced by Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, a Cabinet member who will also retain his home minister portfolio. Earlier Tuesday, the government announced it had terminated the services of Attorney General Abdul Gani Patail.

Najib said he also dropped four other ministers to strengthen his administration and ensure they can "work as a team."

"I can accept differences in opinion and criticisms as part of the decision-making process, but these differences in opinion should not be made in an open forum that can affect public perception of the government and the country," he said.

Critics slammed Gani's abrupt removal and cast it as an attempt by Najib to avoid prosecution.

"The purge commences. The Attorney-General is replaced. Any flicker of hope that the prime minister might be charged for misdeeds is extinguished," opposition lawmaker Tony Pua tweeted.

"The fact that he is not answering the allegations but instead removed his critics is not a good sign," said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, who heads the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs think tank. "It shows deep desperation on Najib's side."

Malaysia's Bar Council, which represents more than 7,000 lawyers, condemned the "ostensible interference" in the investigations into 1MDB and warned it could cripple the probe and render it a "meaningless charade."

Muhyiddin, the deputy, has been critical of the government's handling of 1MDB's massive debt and on Sunday night repeated his call for Najib to explain the alleged funds transfer.

Najib said, "The decision to replace Muhyiddin was a very difficult one, but I had to do it so that a strong team can move forward."

Gani was replaced by a Federal Court judge, Mohamed Apandi Ali, months before the attorney general had been due to retire in October. The government said Gani was leaving for health reasons, but when contacted by Malay Mail Online, Gani said he had not been aware of the decision.

Gani confirmed earlier this month that he had received documents from investigators that linked Najib and 1MDB. The existence of the documents, which allegedly show $700 million was wired from entities linked to 1MDB into Najib's accounts, were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Najib has not disputed the existence of the accounts or the receipt of the funds. He has only said that he has never used government funds for personal gain, and called the allegations a political sabotage. Officials with 1MDB also have denied wrongdoing.

The documents sent to the attorney general pave the way for possible criminal charges, which would be a first for a Malaysian prime minister.

Muyhiddin later Tuesday said he accepted Najib's decision but will not waver on his stand in the 1MDB saga. He said in a statement on Facebook that he will remain as deputy president in the ruling party and will strive to restore confidence in it.

Apart from Muhyiddin, Najib also dropped Shafie Apdal as rural development minister. Shafie, a vice president in Najib's Malay party, has also been critical of the government's handling of the 1MDB saga. On Tuesday Shafie also defended his comments, saying in a statement that they were aimed at strengthening the party and putting the country on the right track.

Najib's National Front coalition has been in power since independence from Britain in 1957. However, support for the coalition has eroded in the last two general elections. In 2013, it won the polls but lost the popular vote for the first time.

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Post time 1-8-2015 09:36 AM | Show all posts
negara kafir pun tau malu kalau buat salah berenti .kalau terima duit kena report n penjara.pemberi n penerima.atas nama apa pun.donation ke,derma ke,political fund ke. dari dlm negeri ke dalam atau luar negara.rakyat sendiri n rakyat luar semua kena.pemimpin islam?
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Post time 1-8-2015 10:12 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
kemaruk replied at 31-7-2015 11:45 PM
hi mzz
kucing awak nama kembang tu sehat tak???


Sihat bangkem..makin gemuk and comel

Bangkem comel mcm kucing mzz tu x?
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Post time 1-8-2015 10:14 AM | Show all posts
gigih ko bekap.... Tau x 2.6 bilion tu byk mna? Igt org saje2 bleh sedekah cmtu...
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Post time 1-8-2015 10:24 AM | Show all posts
mzzenma replied at 1-8-2015 10:12 AM
Sihat bangkem..makin gemuk and comel

Bangkem comel mcm kucing mzz tu x?

bangkem kurus kering

bangkem minat kucing gak, mungkin kita ada jodoh
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