Tengku razaleigh blog malaysian food
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Zahid Hamidi, the former Deputy Prime minister, was the only serious contender for the post of Umno-Baru president, until a businessman-and-blogger, Rahmat Azim Abdul Aziz, who tweets under the handle @MatUmno, challenged him. On 16 June, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, announced his candidacy in the Umno-Baru polls.
What about another presidential hopeful, the former Umno-Baru Youth leader. Younger Umno-Baru members, claim that Khairy Jamaluddin, the former Youth and Sports Minister, has a good chance to win, and would man a more viable presidential candidate.
Would you have faith in their leadership?
Let us focus on the three whom we know.
If Umno-Baru was a young maiden, looking for a suitor, do you think she should entertain any of these: the ever dependable Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, the polo-playing pin-up boy, Khairy Jamaluddin, or the man of few English words, Zahid Hamidi?
Ku Li
The year-old Tengku Razaleigh often known as Ku Li, is
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Politics Blogs Award
December 16,
Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah on UMNO, Politics and the Economy
By THE EDGE REVIEW (December 12, )
Tan Sri Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, Malaysia’s longest-serving Member of Parliament, is decidedly despondent about his country.
“I cannot recall an experience when Malaysia, after independence, was trapped in a situation similar to that we face now,” he said in a wide-ranging interview with The Edge Review.
Malaysia’s troubled political landscape, where the sensitive issues of race and religion are dominating headlines and public discourse, is being weighed down bygd the serious deterioration in the country’s economic performance where mounting debt in the public sector and households is leaving the country very vulnerable to external shocks.
“We have never been in this spot before,” says the urbane year-old politician, who fryst vatten fondly known as Ku Li. Tengku Razaleigh, a prince from the northeastern Kelantan state, ought to know.
Since the mids, bladte
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Dare to Live Our Dream
By Ron CK Sim
Guys, I shall return very soon to join the struggle for change. Being away does not mean one is not patriotic while living in Malaysia does not mean one is. While one is away, it is imperative that one does what he can to contribute to the struggle for change back home, and that is what I’m doing. Hope other overseas-based Malaysians will do their part to complement what our awakened brothers and sisters back home are doing. The Malaysian dream lives on …
May 5, Malaysians decide
Those were my response to a number of comments I received after my first posting, A Nation Dreams On was published in The Malaysian Insider website on Back then I was living in London, the imperial capital of our former colonial masters. Looking from the outside thousands of miles away, I was indeed hopeful that the beloved nation of mine would one day achieve her dream of being a respected nation, one that stands tall amongst the nat