Thursday 29 March 2012

Societal differences between Big City and Small Town in Malaysia

Well been around KL a number of times now, can't remember how many times I have boarded the KTM train from Batang Benar station in Mantin (Pajam), Negeri Sembilan to KL Sentral.

There is a difference in what is socially acceptable in Mantin (a small town, more aptly described as Mantin Village whose main development is the uni campus, then add to that a cement factory of sorts, and a main street along a motorway to a city) and Kuala Lumpur. Mantin is more conservative in terms of what is accepted. Women wear their Saris (i.e locals) or younger girls perhaps wear the faded out jean and a T-Shirt and sneakers and some add to that the veil that covers their hair - generally well covered up. Then go to KL, (my views being a well raised man from a moderately conservative middle class Zimbabwean family), you find young girls wearing tiny tiny shorts that you can almost see something you might not like, holding smartphones bigger than their heads staring at them, whilst glossing their lips, pacing off to somewhere unlikely to be that important. Or some of them possibly escorts smoking at a restaurant close to an upmarket mall looking too young to be allowed entrance to such places at that time of the night. Its the challenge of modernity vs. maintaining a society of good values and morals. I guess you cannot spare even a country like Malaysia.

Sunday 18 March 2012

Lost in Petaling Jaya, spent RM200 on Taxi

Went to Glad Tidings Church in Petaling Jaya Kuala Lumpur. So the normal way to travel is by metro rail, from the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur and within Kuala Lumpur. From our Mantin Base we went to KTM Batang Benar Station by taxi (RM10) to get a train. Theres a train every 30 minutes from that station, so we arrived at 1257 or something, and as we just finished purchasing our tickets the train arrived. We scurried up the steps of the ramp that took us to the side the train was but it was a futile task as we were fully aware that the train spends less than a minute at each stop as passengers disembark and new people board.

So we had to wait for the next train at 1330 in the warm humid shade of the station.

We decided to buy fruit and mineral water (you dont drink tap water in these parts you might get hepatitis). The fruit looked appealing at first sight, fresh guava packed in neat transparent plastic packs, at a stall manned by a young boy with his mother looking on from behind in the comfort of her chair. However, when my other sense kicked in, I realized we had just bought cut fruit which was home made and packed, and the thought of a dirty kitchen full of flies and unwashed hands peeling and cutting the fruit...perhaps! I did not manage to eat the fruit and I gladly passed it on to my friend who did not mind at all lah :)

We chatted about how electric trains in Zambia (where she is from) and Zimbabwe dont work, how the foundation year for undergraduate students seemed a waste of time, and nostalgia of home. I realized it was time for the train to arrive and dug into my pocket crowded by wallet, apartment keys, student ID, passport to take out my ticket but alas it was not there. I looked in the back pocket of my jeans, my shirt pocket...nothing. I had lost my ticket (RM5)... I remembered I could have left it at that fruit stall when I was buying water and fruit and had taken out my wallet to pay, I was holding the ticket in my right hand and would have put it on the table of the stall to open my wallet. I rushed towards the ramp, blushed by my clumsiness and as I reached it I saw the train coming! My friend said just leave it, will miss the train again tozoona mberi (not in Shona)! So I just jumped into the train, knowing trouble lay ahead for my wallet for boarding without ticket (Surcharge RM30).

There is a private university called MAHSA medical university next to the University of Malaya. Thats where we went, in Petaling Jaya. We met her cousin who is doing first year nursing there, a young pleasant girl perhaps 17 or so, in the cafeteria because males cannot go to female apartments and at this particular university the rules are actually enforced :) We chatted, she went bought drinks for us, and later my friend went with her to her room to have her weave undone (there was going to be a stop at the hair salon. OMG women!) Then we went to Glad Tidings church by taxi (RM20)

After service there was pizza for everyone leaving at the door, and free mineral water and mentos in a gift bag for new comers, good for me I was famished! It was after 1900, we walked to a point where we thought we would probably get taxi to The Summit Mall. There was no taxi, they were all passing full, so we walked about 200 metres on, past a car dealership with Bentley, Porsche, and Benz, an Architects Firm, a Wedding Boutique, to the small shopping centre with lots of restaurants just ahead in this neighbourhood which is a mixture of homes, homes converted to offices and business and some big offices and Nissan dealership on one side from where we had come from the very big and modern Glad Tidings church building (like the ones you see on TV for e.g Hillsong Church if you watch gospel channels). The taxi stopped, "How much to The Summit?" "There is congestion at this time fren, and its far fren it will be RM40!". "How about to Sunway City?" the other girl asked, "Same price fren, same price." We glanced at each other, she said there was no other hair salon for African women's hair she knew close by, then we decided to just go. At least I wasnt paying! She was sponsoring the whole trip she just asked me to escort her to KL as she felt safer travelling with a guy.

Got to The Summit, went to salon yevanhu vakunyika iya vakazara kuno. Walked around the mall, it was big, 4 floors and a basement, but it seemed from a little lower down the spectrum for malls I had seen so far, Mid Valley and Times Square. This was no mega mall, it was like Ximex mall only bigger vertically and horizontally. Relaxing hair (RM50...heard a hair cut only is RM60 at Mid Valley mall!) takes time OMG!

Hair done at 2215, good we could make it to KTM rail before it closes! Then lethargically the hair dresser removed the ..erm rollers. "This hair is still wet", she said "But I waited for 10 minutes before you came to check after the dryer went off, it would have been dry by now!". "No, this hair is wet, you wanna go with it like that? It has to go to the dryer." 40 minutes later it was done, it was 2315. KTM rail was closed! Maybe we can get a bus to Mantin?

Taxi take us to MAHSA college (RM40). "Mr Taxi Man, KTM has closed, where can we get a bus to Mantin", "No bus Mantin, stop at 11". OMG, we would have to take a taxi to Mantin and it cost someone she knows RM140. I felt sorry she would have to pay that, so said maybe she could sleep in her friend's apartment (she is a cousin in fact), and I could crash somewhere if she knew a guy I could crash with since its a weekend and some people (locals) will have gone home. She called, she SMSd her good friends, "I am good friends with this guy" she said, ....they all had excuses. Thank God! The idea of crashing at someones apartment seemed daunting, I was being polite :), a gentleman. We would have to taxi to Mantin.

Stopped first taxi, he said "No no cannot go Mantin". Second, an old man who just knew the direction to Seremban, along which you find Mantin, who drove an old not so metered taxi (non GPSed am sure). He said its after 12PM, there is a tax for after 12PM so rate is whatever amount plus RM10-15. Again we glanced at each other. "How much is it total", "Dont know, dont know". "Will it be RM80" the friend asked, "Dont know" We glanced at each other. I explained to him where it was, that it was before Seremban and before Nilai, he asked "You know how to", "How to?", "How to....direction, direction :)". I said yes, when we get to Mantin I know way to campus so how much money, he lightly threw his arms into the air to say I dont know. I said RM100, knowing someone had paid RM140 from Times Square before. He said "Dont know" We glanced at each other, and then he said "Ok ok RM100".

We travelled past Mid Valley Mega Mall, past beautiful beautiful brightly lit office towers, tens of 50+ storey apartment blocks, more and more big beautiful buildings, on a motor way that never sleeps, over flyovers looking down at the beautiful city below from an angle I had never seen before. I was mistaken, no city in Africa is yet at this stage, good bye Joburg, good bye,bye!

We got home around 0200. The campus was busy as normal, people going to buy take away, some people waking up to go buy beer after struggling to get sleep, others who had never lay down at all going to the sports bar to watch live English Premier games (+8 hours here), some girls walking to their boyfriends' apartment. Campus life.

Wednesday 14 March 2012

The man who made Malaysia what it is today - Dr. Muhathir Mohamad

 I cannot say it any better than wikipedia...

(Source Wikipedia, 3/14/2012, Muhathir Mohamad)

"Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad (pronounced [maˈhadɪr bɪn moˈhamat]). (born 10 July 1925) is a Malaysian politician who was the fourth Prime Minister of Malaysia. He held the post for 22 years from 1981 to 2003, making him Malaysia's longest serving Prime Minister. His political career spanned almost 40 years.

Born and raised in Alor Setar, Kedah, Mahathir excelled at school and became a medical doctor. He became active in the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), Malaysia's largest political party, before entering parliament in 1964. He served one term before losing his seat, before falling out with the then Prime Minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman and being expelled from UMNO. When Abdul Rahman resigned, Mahathir re-entered UMNO and parliament, and was promoted to the Cabinet. By 1976, he had risen to Deputy Prime Minister, and in 1981 was sworn in as Prime Minister after the resignation of his predecessor, Hussein Onn.

During Mahathir's tenure as Prime Minister, Malaysia experienced rapid modernisation and economic growth, and his government initiated a series of bold infrastructure projects. He was a dominant political figure, winning five consecutive general elections and seeing off all of his rivals for the leadership of UMNO. However, his accumulation of power came at the expense of the independence of the judiciary and the traditional powers and privileges of Malaysia's royalty. He also deployed the controversial Internal Security Act to detain activists, non-mainstream religious figures, and political opponents including his sacked deputy, Anwar Ibrahim. Mahathir's record of curbing civil liberties and his antagonism to western diplomatic interests and economic policy made his relationships with the likes of the US, Britain and Australia difficult. As Prime Minister, he was an advocate of third-world development and a prominent international activist for causes such as the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa and the interests of Bosnians in the 1990s Balkans conflict.

He remains an active political figure in his retirement, having become a strident critic of his handpicked successor, Abdullah Badawi, and actively supporting Abdullah's replacement by Najib Razak

[edit] Early years (1981–1987)

Mahathir exercised caution in his first two years in power, consolidating his leadership of UMNO and, with victory in the 1982 general election, the government.[32][33] In 1983, Mahathir commenced the first of a number of battles he would have with Malaysia's royalty during his premiership. The position of Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the Malaysian head of state, was due to rotate in to either the elderly Idris Shah II of Perak or the controversial Iskandar of Johor. Mahathir had grave reservations about the two sultans. Both were activist rulers of their own states and Iskandar had only a few years earlier been convicted of manslaughter.[34][35] Mahathir tried to pre-emptively limit the power that the new Agong could wield over his government, introducing to parliament amendments to the Constitution to deem the Agong to assent to any bill that had not been assented within 15 days of passage by parliament. The proposal would also remove the power to declare a state of emergency from the Agong and placed it with the Prime Minister. The Agong at the time, Ahmad Shah of Pahang, agreed with the proposals in principle but baulked when he realised that the proposal would also deem Sultans to assent to laws passed by state assemblies. Supported by the Sultans, the Agong refused to assent to the constitutional amendments, which had by then passed both houses of parliament with comfortable majorities.[36][37] When the public became aware of the impasse, and the Sultans refused to compromise with the government, Mahathir took the streets to demonstrate public support for his position in mass rallies. The press took the side of the government, although a large minority of Malays, including conservative UMNO politicians, and an even larger proportion of the Chinese community, supported the sultans. After five months, the crisis resolved, as Mahathir and the sultans agreed to a compromise. The Agong would retain the power to declare a state of emergency, but if he refused to assent to a bill, the bill would be returned to parliament, which could then override the Agong's veto.[38]
A white Proton Europestar displayed in a showroom
Mahathir's government used tariffs to support the development of the Proton as a Malaysian-made car.
On the economic front, Mahathir inherited the New Economic Policy from his predecessors, which was designed to improve the economic position of the bumiputera (Malaysia's Malays and indigenous peoples) through targets and affirmative action in areas such as corporate ownership and university admission.[39] Mahathir also actively pursued privatisation of government enterprises from the early 1980s, both for the liberal economic reasons it was being pursued by contemporaries such as Margaret Thatcher, and because he felt that combined with affirmative action for the bumiputera it could provide economic opportunities for bumiputera businesses.[40] His government privatised airlines, utilities and telecommunication firms, accelerating to a rate of about 50 privatisations a year by the mid-1990s.[41] While privatisation generally improved the working conditions of Malaysians in privatised industries and raised significant revenue for the government, many privatisations occurred in the absence of open tendering processes and benefited Malays who supported UMNO. One of the most notable infrastructure projects at the time was the construction of the North–South Expressway, a motorway running from the Thai border to Singapore; the contract to construct the expressway was awarded to a business venture of UMNO.[42] Mahathir also oversaw the establishment of the car manufacturer Proton as a joint venture between the Malaysian government and Mitsubishi. By the end of the 1980s, Proton had overcome poor demand and losses to become, with the support of protective tariffs, the largest car maker in Southeast Asia and a profitable enterprise.[43]

In Mahathir's early years as Prime Minister, Malaysia was experiencing a resurgence of Islam among Malays. Malays were becoming more religious and more conservative. PAS, which had in the 1970s joined UMNO in government, responded to the resurgence by taking an increasingly strident Islamist stand under the leadership of the man who in 1969 had defeated Mahathir for his parliamentary seat, Yusof Rawa. Mahathir tried to appeal to religious voters by establishing Islamic institutions such as the International Islamic University of Malaysia which could promote Islamic education under the government's oversight. He also attracted Anwar Ibrahim, the leader of the Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (ABIM) to join UMNO. In some cases, Mahathir's government employed repression against more extreme exponents of Islamism. Ibrahim Libya, a popular Islamist leader, was killed in a police shoot-out in 1985; Al-Arqam, a religious sect, was banned and its leader, Ashaari Mohammad, arrested under the Internal Security Act.[44] Mahathir comprehensively defeated PAS at the polls in 1986, winning 83 seats of the 84 seats it contested, leaving PAS with just one MP.[45]

[edit] Exerting power (1987–1990)

Any illusion that the 1986 election may have created about Mahathir's political dominance was short-lived. In 1987, he was challenged for the presidency of UMNO, and effectively the prime ministership, by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah. Razaleigh's career had gone backwards under Mahathir, being demoted from the Ministry of Finance to the Ministry of Trade and Industry. Razaleigh was supported by Musa, who had resigned as Deputy Prime Minister the previous year. While Musa and Mahathir were originally close allies, the two had fallen out during Mahathir's premiership, with Musa claiming that Mahathir no longer trusted him. Razaleigh and Musa ran for the UMNO presidency and deputy presidency on a joint ticket against Mahathir and his new choice for deputy, Ghafar Baba. The tickets were known as Team B and Team A respectively. Mahathir's Team A enjoyed the support of the press, most party heavyweights, and even Iskandar, now the Agong, although some significant figures, such as future prime minister Abdullah Badawi, supported Team B. In the election, held on 24 April 1987, Team A prevailed. Mahathir was re-elected a by a narrow margin, receiving the votes of 761 party delegates to Razaleigh's 718. Ghafar defeated Musa by a slightly larger margin. Mahathir responded by purging seven Team B supporters from his ministry, while Team B refused to accept defeat and initiated litigation. In an unexpected decision in February 1988, the High Court ruled that UMNO was an illegal organisation as some of its branches had not been lawfully registered.[46][47] Each faction raced to register a new party under the UMNO name. Mahathir's side successfully registered the name "UMNO Baru" ("new UMNO"), while Team B's application to register "UMNO Malaysia" was rejected. UMNO Malaysia under the leadership of Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, with the support of both of Malaysia's surviving former prime ministers Abdul Rahman and Hussein, registered the party Semangat 46 instead.[48]

Having survived the political crisis at least temporarily, Mahathir moved against the judiciary, fearing a successful appeal by Team B against the decision to register UMNO Baru. He steered an amendment to the Constitution through parliament to remove the general power of the High Courts to conduct judicial review. The High Courts could now only engage in judicial review where specific acts of parliament gave them the power to do so. The Lord President of the Supreme Court, Salleh Abas, responded by sending a letter of protest to the Agong. Mahathir then suspended Salleh for "gross misbehaviour and conduct", ostensibly because the letter was a breach of protocol. A tribunal setup by Mahathir found Salleh guilty and recommended to the Agong that Salleh be dismissed. Five other judges of the court supported Salleh, and were suspended by Mahathir. A newly constituted court dismissed Team B's appeal, allowing Mahathir's faction to continue to use the name UMNO. According to Milne and Mauzy, the episode destroyed the independence of Malaysia's judiciary.[49]

At the same time as the political and judicial crises, Mahathir initiated a crackdown on opposition dissidents with the use of the Internal Security Act. The appointment of a number of administrators who did not speak Mandarin to Chinese schools provoked an outcry among Chinese Malaysians to the point where UMNO's coalition partners the Malaysian Chinese Association and Gerakan joined the Democratic Action Party (DAP) in protesting the appointments. UMNO's Youth wing held a provocative protest that triggered a shooting by a lone Malay gunman, and only Mahathir's interference prevented UMNO from staging a larger protest. Instead, Mahathir ordered what Wain calls "the biggest crackdown on political dissent Malaysia had ever seen". Under the police operation codenamed "Lalang", 119 people were arrested and detained without charge under the Internal Security Act. Mahathir argued that the detentions were necessary to prevent a repeat of the 1969 race riots. Most of the detainees were prominent opposition activists, including the leader of the DAP, Lim Kit Siang, and nine of his fellow MPs. Three newspapers sympathetic to the opposition were shut down.[50]

Mahathir suffered a heart attack in early 1989,[51] but recovered to lead Barisan Nasional to victory in the 1990 election. Semangat 46 failed to make any headway outside Razaleigh's home state of Kelantan (Musa had since rejoined UMNO).[52]

[edit] Economic development to financial crisis (1990–1998)

The expiry of the Malaysian New Economic Policy (NEP) in 1990 gave Mahathir the opportunity to outline his economic vision for Malaysia. In 1991, he announced Vision 2020, under which Malaysia would aim to become a fully developed country within 30 years.[53] The target would require average economic growth of approximately seven per cent of gross domestic product per annum.[54] One of Vision 2020's features would be to gradually break down ethnic barriers. Vision 2020 was accompanied by the NEP's replacement, the National Development Policy (NDP), under which some government programs designed to benefit the bumiputera exclusively were opened up to other ethnicities.[55] The NDP achieved success in one of its main aims, poverty reduction. By 1995, less than nine per cent of Malaysians lived in poverty and income inequality had narrowed.[56] Mahathir's government cut corporate taxes and liberalised financial regulations to attract foreign investment. The economy grew by over nine per cent per annum until 1997 prompting other developing countries to try to emulate Mahathir's policies.[57] Much of the credit for Malaysia's economic development in the 1990s went to Anwar Ibrahim, appointed by Mahathir as Finance Minister in 1991.[58] The government rode the economic wave and won the 1995 election with an increased majority.[59]

Mahathir initiated a series of major infrastructure projects in the 1990s. One of the largest was the Multimedia Super Corridor, an area south of Kuala Lumpur, in the mould of Silicon Valley, designed to cater for the information technology industry. However, the project failed to generate the investment anticipated.[60] Other Mahathir projects included the development of Putrajaya as the home of Malaysia's public service, and bringing a Formula One Grand Prix to Sepang.[61] One of the most controversial developments was the Bakun Dam in Sarawak. The ambitious hydro-electric project was intended to carry electricity across the South China Sea to satisfy electricity demand in peninsular Malaysia. To deliver the project, Mahathir and the local Barisan Nasional government selected a head contractor close to Mahathir without an open tendering process. The project subsequently suffered from environmental protests, conflicts between contractors, and opposition from the 10,000 residents who would be forcibly displaced from the Sarawak jungle. Work on the dam was eventually suspended due to the Asian financial crisis.[62]

The financial crisis threatened to devastate Malaysia. The value of the ringgit plummeted due to currency speculation, foreign investment fled, and the main stock exchange index fell by over 75 per cent. At the urging of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the government cut government spending and raised interest rates, which only served to exacerbate the economic situation. In 1998, Mahathir reversed this policy course in defiance of the IMF and his own deputy, Anwar. He increased government spending and fixed the ringgit to the US dollar. The result confounded his international critics and the IMF. Malaysia recovered from the crisis faster than its Southeast Asian neighbours. In the domestic sphere, it was a political triumph. Amidst the economic events of 1998, Mahathir had sacked Anwar as Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister, and he could now claim to have rescued the economy in spite of Anwar's policies.[63]
In his second decade in office, Mahathir had again found himself battling Malaysia's royalty. In 1992, Sultan Iskandar's son, a representative hockey player, was suspended from competition for five years for assaulting an opponent. Iskandar retaliated by pulling all Johor hockey teams out of national competitions. When his decision was criticised by a local coach, Iskandar ordered him to his palace and beat him. The federal parliament unanimously censured Iskandar, and Mahathir leapt at the opportunity to remove the constitutional immunity of the sultans from civil and criminal suits. The press backed Mahathir and, in an unprecedented development, started airing allegations of misconduct by members of Malaysia's royal families. As the press revealed examples of the rulers' extravagant wealth, Mahathir resolved to cut financial support to royal households. With the press and the government pitted against them, the sultans capitulated to the government's proposals. Their powers to deny assent to bills were limited by further constitutional amendments passed in 1994. With the status and powers of the Malaysian royalty diminished, Wain writes that by the mid-1990s Mahathir had become the country's "uncrowned king".[64]

[edit] The final years and succession (1998–2003)

By the mid-1990s it had become clear that the most serious threat to Mahathir's power was the leadership ambition of his deputy, Anwar. Anwar began to distance himself from Mahathir, overtly promoting his superior religious credentials and appearing to suggest he favoured loosening the restrictions on civil liberties that had become a hallmark of Mahathir's premiership.[65] However, Mahathir continued to back Anwar as his successor until their relationship collapsed dramatically during the Asian financial crisis. Their positions gradually diverged, with Mahathir abandoning the tight monetary and fiscal policies urged by the IMF. At the UMNO General Assembly in 1998, a leading Anwar supporter, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, criticised the government for not doing enough to combat corruption and cronyism. As Mahathir took the reins of Malaysia's economic policy over the coming months, Anwar was increasingly sidelined. On 2 September, he was dismissed as Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister, and promptly expelled from UMNO. No immediate reasons were given for the dismissal, although the media speculated that it related to lurid allegations of sexual misconduct circulated in a "poison pen letter" at the general assembly.[66] As more allegations surfaced, large public rallies were held in support of Anwar. On 20 September, he was arrested and placed in detention under the Internal Security Act.[67]

Anwar stood trial on four charges of corruption, arising from allegations that Anwar abused his power by ordering police to intimidate persons who had alleged Anwar had sodomised them. Before Anwar's trial, Mahathir told the press that he was convinced of Anwar's guilt. He was found guilty in April 1999 and sentenced to six years in prison.[68] In another trial shortly after, Anwar was sentenced to another nine years in prison on a conviction for sodomy.[69] The sodomy conviction was overturned on appeal after Mahathir left office.[70]

While Mahathir had vanquished his rival, it came at a cost to his standing in the international community and domestic politics. US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright defended Anwar as a "highly respectable leader" who was "entitled to due process and a fair trial".[71] In a speech in Kuala Lumpur, which Mahathir attended, US Vice President Al Gore stated that "we continue to hear calls for democracy", including "among the brave people of Malaysia".[72] At the APEC summit in 1999, Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien refused to meet Mahathir, while his foreign minister met with Anwar's wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.[73] Wan Azizah had formed a liberal opposition party, the National Justice Party (Keadilan) to fight the 1999 election. UMNO lost 18 seats and two state governments as large numbers of Malay voters flocked to PAS and Keadilan, many in protest at the treatment of Anwar.[74]

At UMNO's general assembly in 2002, Mahathir announced that he would resign as Prime Minister, only for supporters to rush to the stage and convince him tearfully to remain. He subsequently fixed his retirement for October 2003, giving him time to ensure an orderly and uncontroversial transition to his anointed successor, Abdullah Badawi.[75] Having spent over 22 years in office, Mahathir was the world's longest-serving elected leader when he retired.[76] He remains Malaysia's longest-serving prime minister."

Walking within the 'Golden Triangle' of Kuala Lumpur metro area you see how developed it is as a result of massive infrastructure projects which took place, mostly during the tenure of Muhathir



Massive metro infrastructure projects are still taking place and it is evident from contruction sites for skyscrapers you can spot adjacent to KL Central Station, which is the center of the Kuala Lumpur    'Golden Triangle'.




Sunday 11 March 2012

Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur

Times Square in KL as it is referred to is a very big mall, similar to Sandton City in Johannesburg for those who have been there only much bigger.

"Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur is a twin tower complex containing a shopping centre and five-star hotel located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was opened in October 2003 by the then Prime Minister of Malaysia, YAB Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir bin Mohamad. Both towers are 203 metres (666 ft) tall, with 48 floors.[1]
It is currently the seventh largest building in the world and has also been tagged as the "world's largest building ever built in a single phase", with 7.5 million square feet (700,000 m²) of built up floor area.[2] This building consists of shopping mall, business office and leisure centre with 1000 retail shops, 1200 luxury service suites, 65 food outlets and entertainment attractions such as Berjaya Times Square Theme Park and GSC MAXX (formerly IMAX) 2D & 3D theatre.[3]

The Kuala Lumpur Monorail's Imbi station is linked to the building by a footbridge" (Source Wikipedia)

Berjaya Times Square Towers

Berjaya Times Square Atrium

 You will find shops selling everything you can ever think off, from designer brands to affordable family clothes, Apple Product Stores to an IT centre with stalls selling affordable notebooks, cellphones tabs, and other gadgets.

I will be visiting all the Mega Malls in Kuala Lumpur (it has about 5 of them according to Wikipedia and Google Maps) in months to come so stay tuned to this blog!

Inside Times Square

 (I think this is the 'Ballroom')





PS. The best place to buy gadgets e.g laptops, phones, tabs, apple products, is in IT Centre inside the Mall from 2nd Level to 3rd Level. BUT for cheaper deals on laptops visit Imbi Plaza just opposite Times Square!

Friday 9 March 2012

Simple Innovations

Some problems we have back in Zimbabwe can easily be solved by simple innovations. I will be listing innovations (or maybe not necessarily innovations...) I see in everyday life in Malaysia which can be implemented back home

1. Instead of building owners or managers turning off their escalators to save electricity (like Joina City, Angwa City, CABS centre), they should put sensors at the point people step onto the escalator so that it starts moving up or down when it senses someone is there, and stops when noone to be moved. Having escalators turned off permanently gives the impression of a non functioning place.

2. It doesnt take much investment to have 24 hr self service petrol pumps where people pay with a prepaid fuel card (bought just like how you buy airtime in supermarkets, etc) or bank card

3. Maintaining roads without potholes is the lowest level of decency a country can have. We need seriously to resurface roads in our towns, at least in business districts, and highways and maintain them in reasonable (not necessarily super) condition. And to have proper road markings, kwete kungoba mari uchitambira $30000 per month and doing no work!

4. A functioning intercity and inner city electric train system could help. It doesn't need to be a bullet train, just a small electric passenger train that is comfortable and clean will go a long way in helping ease congestion in Harare. Say for Chitungwiza to Harare, Norton to Harare, Beatrice to Harare, Ruwa to Harare with a revamped Harare Central Station and some other stations which are major points people want to drop off in the city whilst enroute to central. This is how with the KTM System in Malaysia. The train system should also provide intercity links, for people going to Bulawayo and towns along the way and Mutare for example. I suggest that they dont put toilet in the trains because filth is one of the biggest reasons why people do not want to travel on NRZ trains (apart from being slow ancient trains)...how do people travel on minibuses and buses without trains? They relieve themselves when it stops at a shopping place or fuel garage with a public toilet...they can also hold it till they reach the next station where the train can depart after 15 minutes to allow for recess. KTM trains do not have toilets inside. Even a private company can establish an electric train system for Harare first and then the rest of the country using existing infrastructure! Its not complicated and it is a good business opportunity! The company would only need to buy appropriate coaches and renovate the train stations. With technology it might even be possible to do away with the age old problem of copper cable theft, who knows maybe somewhere out there theres a company which builds electric train coaches which do not need to be using copper cables, or perhaps generate their own electricity whilst moving. Think BIG Zimbabwe!


Kuala Lumpur Central Station. It is not an underground system its just how it looks at the station.

A KTM Commuter Train at another station not 'in town'

Read more about KL Central Station http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuala_Lumpur_Sentral_railway_station

5. Harare needs one huge mega mall area, like Sandton City in Joburg, or Times Square/MidValley ++ here in Kuala Lumpur. Cant that be done by a simple development linking Joina City, to a roofed pedestrians only first street mall, joined to Eastgate Mall? In some cities malls are linked to create one huge mall. As for Times Square in Kuala Lumpur it is a single development however - read blog post Berjaya Times Square Kuala Lumpur. {Written before the great Mall of Zimbabwe in Borrowdale was announced}

6. Can Zimbabwe have a strong car manufacturing industry? Why not? We have a market of more than 5 million people one of their highest aspirations is owning a car and we are busy importing used Japanese vehicles! And another excuse we have, people have no money! There are cheap brand new cars for $10000...its possible to have them in our country too. The government can easily attract one of the emerging car companies from China by having an agreement with them to manufacture the car in Zimbabwe, in return for Zero Import tariffs for components, and low tax in return for employment, technology transfer and reasonable quality backed by a nationwide service and repair system. Employment, employment, employment...Read about Proton in Malaysia and what they did to have their own car manufacturer.
Proton Automobile - Malaysia's national car http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton_(automobile)

7. **ZIMBABWE - A Regional Center of Tertiary Education read post http://southernafrican-inmalaysia.blogspot.com/2012/05/international-center-of-tertiary.html

8. A young and fresh Christian music radio channel for Zimbabwe - thats not too difficult is it - and the market is there!

9. A hip urban Zimbabwean music TV channel on free-to-air satellite. People simply don't watch ZBC anymore - why should they watch SABC and some content they can barely relate to on free-to-air satellite and DSTV - when there is a lot of good quality music videos and other content coming from Zimbabweans based in the diaspora.

10. ZBC TV should just give it up and put its channels on free-to-air satellite if they want people to watch! They have lost it - people are really not tuning in (and most people cannot afford DSTV - they are watching BTVand SABC)

11. ZBC Radio channels on the internet for streaming - diasporans want to listen! Er erm - its not difficult at all!

12. I dream of a time when the highest status symbol for Zimbabwe's elite is constructing a high rise building in Harare CBD - not a car, not a concubine, not meaningless trips abroad. That is what truly rich people do in other countries - leaving a legacy - not pouring money down the drain. THINK BIG

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Cafe Ibrahim Bistro

Malaysia cuisine is a rich mixture of cooking traditions of the Malay, Indian and Chinese people who make up its population.

Malay food is a culmination of a rich ethnic ethnic heritage of the Malay people who are descendants of an ancient Malay people mixed with Indian, Thai, Arab and Chinese Ancestry. Rice is a staple and it can be taken for breakfast, lunch and supper cooked in a amazingly different number of ways (in Southern Africa we only know one way - to boil).

One type of rice on the menu at Cafe Ibrahim Bistro (dont know if its China Fried Rice, Kampung Fried Rice, Kerabu Fried Rice, Thai Fried, Salted Fish Fried, Padrik Fried, or 10 other rices!!!)

Malay food uses a lot of fresh herbs in its various dishes such as garlic, ginger, lemon grass, shallots and fresh chillies which of course we are all familiar with, and a number of other local herbs and roots which are key components of Malaysian cuisine. These include daun kemangi (a basil), daun kesum (a leaf you've never heard of), bunga kantan (a wild ginger's flower), kunyit basah (tumeric root)...and many others only Jamie Oliver would be interested in knowing (I am interested in the tasting only)!


Two different types of chicken you can have at Cafe Ibrahim Bistro

The food is generally very hott... one day I had rice and chicken in deep red sauce thinking it was a sweet tomato soup that would go down well with the meal and aha...guess what.. if a tongue can turn red that day it did. I have never eaten something so hot in my life, I could not taste the chicken when chewing it honestly...it could have been edible rubber and I would not have noticed :) But for those who have a taste for hot food, having this would be a good challenge to your claim of loving hot food. I think this chicken is called CHICKEN RED (Ayam Masak Merah) on the menu of Cafe Ibrahim Bistro, a campus cafe that serves Malaysian and International dishes for a multinational campus...

Are you a fan of hot food? Are you sure?
Go have chicken in deep red sauce, you love it :D

But there is also food which is not hot. I had chicken (called Ayam in Bahasa Malaysia Language) which was sweet, like it was honied.. It was ok. Look out for it, it will be in a chocolate brown sauce which has chunks of herbs in it... You can also have deep fried chicken, which is 'Fried Chicken on the menu above'. Back home chicken is described either simply stewed or grilled (in the oven), here the identification is more of how it tastes, looks, or the ingredients used. There isn't much beef steak...its not as popular as it is back home though I had ox liver (I certainly thought it was ox liver chunks? Ahh...was it ox liver???). Like we have sadza (suggie) and beef almost everyday as the staple they have rice and chicken.


I think I have found a photo with CHICKEN RED, it must be the one to the left
the liver is on the right

The last note on Malay food is Lemak food. This is food which uses coconut milk as a key ingredient and it has a prime taste which is sour and an underlying note which is sweet like apricot, or dried prunes (as one competitor blog I will not cite describes!) One admin staff I met having breakfast this morning told me to try some time Nasi Lemak, a traditional breakfast of rice and coconut milk, which he was having. It looked good, though it appeared a bit too rich for my morning meal. Wouldn't hurt having it for lunch eh..

You can also have rape (or something similar) and green beans (called long beans here I think)
and cabbage to the far left...

Now whilst I was watching a English Premier League (of which I am not a fan!) game between Arsenal and Tottenham that started at 1 am (thats the time you get to watch live games here, you have to be a devoted supporter!) at the 'sports bar' somewhere else on campus I ordered an apple smoothie (called apple shake). It wasn't the sweet but slightly acid apple taste I expected, but rather a bland sugar taste with just a whiff of apple on smell on the nose. There seems to be a shortage of malic acid in the apples here uncle google (as one lecturer describes it) says... ;-/ But today had a banana smoothie, sweet, not as much banana taste as I would have expected but ok.. at least they are edible and ok! Someone in the Netherlands told me I would not be able to eat a banana there!

So will talk some other time about Malaysian Indian, and Chinese food which are also a significant part Malaysian cuisine....

Monday 5 March 2012

Sadza! Suggie (Pronounced Suji)

All over Africa ppl eat sadza. Its just how its made or what its made of that varies, from maize meal to green bananas! and cassava etc or whether its a daily meal or a delicacy. Here in Malaysia I discovered Suggie (Suji), I think its a nigerian name but the flour is readily available in shops so there must be a similar meal made from it in Bahasa Malaysia language. I had accompanied a colleague to a congolese friends apartment close to the campus. His from Congo, and he lived in Zimbabwe a little, and other Southern Africa countries, they eat Sadza as well in Congo but they mix maize meal with cassava flour. There we ate lunch of Sugie and Chicken. None of us knows yet what the flour (meal) for suggie is made from, they just buy by measure from the grocer. It tastes a lot like sadza but its denser and heavier with a distant mashed potato taste...
Will talk about Malaysian food soon. Fruit Juice and Sadza were just starters....

Saturday 3 March 2012

So thats why the South African's are so full of themselves :P

So the South African commercial empire extends to these shores. I have just noticed eh.. visited Tesco the other day and gues what, I saw Savanna cider, Nederberg wines (wines are all either from France or South Africa in the wine section) and I said, oh well its Tesco for crying out loud, it will obviously stock imported goods. Then this morning I went to the campus store to buy some juice, a small grocery store and i was astonished LiquiFruit and Ceres labels say Product of South Africa. I see now, so thats why the South African's are so full of themselves :P (said in good humour)...



Product of South Africa in Malaysia


South Africa is not a poor country. Here in Malaysia I would expect to see 100% Fruit Juice from Malaysia not from South Africa. Why are there so many black people in poverty in South Africa, from what I hear? 

And they even watch SuperSport 3 for English Premier League football!!!! South Africa has indeed a very good commercial footprint in the world. Kudos..

Thursday 1 March 2012

Culture Shock

The most important thing is cultural differences. I browsed the internet and I am getting to understand some things I have noticed in Malaysian peoples behaviour etc

-You cannot stretch your hand to a woman to handshake unless she initiates it (especially in conservative circles...not much so in young multicultural savvy environments)
-**Saving face is very important to them, avoid bluntly indicating that they are wrong when they are wrong, go round about the issue...especially in public. Doing so might be the end of a business relationship. Same with yourself, you should save face as well.
- At work they need to be addressed with titles like Mr. This, not first names like elsewhere...even younger ppl in admin I just call Alex???? lol Will just call Lecturers Sir,,,
-You cannot play with their girls, you will be thrown off a balcony :DDD LOL This is not in the rulebook but it says on the internet their social culture strongly emphasizes strongly marrying within their ethnicity of which there are a number of ethnicities...
Thats me in the middle, never mind the guy behind me he is definitely not Malaysian, his from India :) Those headscarfs just look beautiful I know women in Zimbabwe would love them!

+++But overall in a multicultural environment whether in business or university the people of Malaysia are good people who are easy to get along with. As long as you respect the culture and values, like they respect yours as well...would you not expect the same if you are in Zimbabwe or South Africa...or Zambia or Uganda? Now lets talk about the food....

At Legenda Education Group or in Kuala Lumpur you need not worry. The campus is a very liberal multi-national environment with students from China, Pakistan, India, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Nigeria, South Africa and Zimbabwe.

Read more about Malaysia Etiquette on http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/global-etiquette/malaysia.html


Introduction to Malaysia

Malaysia is a middle income country, with GDP purchasing power parity of 447 billion, ranked 30 in the world according to GDP purchasing power parity (whatever that is!), with the European Union countries grouped into one and ranked 1 in the world, followed by USA, China, India etc... According to this ranking it is one place ahead of Nigeria and 4 behind South Africa. Population is 29 million, GDP per capita ranking 77 in the world..South Africa is 104 in the world, whilst Botswana is ranked higher at 72. (CIA World Factbook Malaysia 2/3/2012)

Malaysia's culture is a mixture Malay, Chinese and Indian culture, and these are the three main groups of  people in terms of population. (CIA- The World Factbook Malaysia 2/3/2012)

The Malaysian Flag (Pictured in Seremban)

The dominant religion in Malaysia is overwhelmingly Islam, though there is a good level of religous tolerance in personal life...

Road around Mantin
The infrastructure in Malaysia is well maintained, though not necessarily new. For example a visiting Dubai one notices that everything is new, and of course well maintained, but in Malaysia you notice that the roads, streets, railway system and some buildings are old, but they are generally in good working order. In my view, an opinion on how well a country is doing should not be made simply on the level of development in the country's business/political capital city, but rather on an assessment of the level of development all around the country. It is with this view I commenced writing this blog before a visit to Kuala Lumpur CBD to avoid this kind of bias. My first visit was to a regional capital of a state (province) close to Kuala Lumpur called Negeri Sembilan, Seremban, and to Mantin a small town within this state enroute to Seremban; something like Chivhu in Njanja as an example...er erm...being a Sinyoro you know :D, both of which are close to the university campus where I live. 

Mantin town, which is enroute to Seremban. No potholes or dust is sight, but maybe its because it rains 9/12 months everyday so there is green grass everywhere. But then how do you explain the absence of potholes when it rains like that?
Seremban, the capital of Negeri Sembilan State

The only noticeable thing to dislike in the general urban environment is litter. Where I have travelled there is a serious problem with littering, used plastic bags, cans, bottles everywhere, which is not good. In this vein I notice how cleaner my beloved little rural hometown of Chivhu is compared to Mantin because in Zimbabwe we do not use as many plastic bags as they use here. If you buy for example one burger, it will be put in a box, then into a plastic bag, if you buy a 1 litre of Ceres fruit juice it will also be put in a plastic bag. And the plastic bag is not durable enough to use twice, and neither is it big enough to use a store of anything for some time. Now I understand why Francis Nhema had a law passed against free plastic bags in supermarkets, and the quality of the plastic bags. It goes a long way towards a good environment... er erm, i know some Zimbabweans are used to complaining every second on the clock and nothing can ever be done right by our government...time to appreciate eh.. next, culture shock...