Sunday, August 31, 2008
Last Friday before Ramadan
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Ayman' s Birthday
There's only a few more days to the start of fasting. Restaurants seem to be doing good business as most people want to eat out before the fasting. And it's also pay day today for most.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
The Red March
Much has been said about how successful the Beijing Olympic was. So much so the Brits had to eat the humble pie early - that they will never match what was on display during the opening ceremony. What was also remarkable was China's medal haul. China only got its first gold in 1984. This time it got 51. India also got a billion people but could only manage one solitary gold. A Small Yellow Book
Donating blood is quite easy and fast. At RIPAS, there is always a doctor on duty at the blood donation ward who can do the screening checks immediately. After that straight to the 'needle' room. The whole thing takes about half an hour.
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Treasure Hunters
The sign indicates location of a large base camp nearby, housing over a thousands workers, conducting surveys in the jungle of Tutong. It would be a serious understatement to try to describe how challenging the work involve. Not only do these guys have to trek through the thick jungles and rugged terrains, the presence of wild and nasty animals would already make the job quite unattractive to a Bruneian.
Cyclists Passing Tutong
We were told amongst the cyclists were some VIPs. There were also some others (including ladies) who are new comers to the world of cycling. But they have been training hard in the last few weeks. By finishing the over 100 km journey, the participants should be proud of themselves of having completed the journey. Apart from tinted skins and few days of aching muscles.
Another Memory Lane
Before electricity reached this village, the nights were only lighted up with kerosine lamps. I remember the lamps were always very bright. They were the pressured type, they had a fuel tank at the bottom with a small pump to pressurise the kerosene.
My old grandma is still around, healthy and well, although over a 100 years old now. The grandpa passed away 7 years ago at the age of over 120 years old. He didn' t have a birth certificate to prove. But he was born 10 years before a British Resident was put in place in the country.
These areas were flood-prone in the past and still are. Some clearing work apparently been done to the river to alleviate the repeated flooding. In the past, the only way to reach this place during the raining season was by boat or walking on the flooded roads as the whole areas were flooded. It normally took an hour to reach this house. Those were the days.
Rainy Days
Some roads were flooded, but most dangerous of all were the stagnant water on some other roads. This is particular so on the Tutong-Muara dual carriageway where vehicles tend to move at higher speed.
We saw this empty land turning into a river of water. With no trees around and vegetations to absorb some of the water, this has resulted in some soil erosion. On its own, this is probably nothing to worried about. But what if the same water catchment area has ten or twenty of similar barren lands.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Missed the Flight
So there we were at the airport wondering why our plane was not displayed on the monitor. Reality slowly sunk in. Our plane has flown out without us. This is the first time we have ever missed a flight. We looked for alternative - Air Asia was the best option. So that was another chapter in our short adventure to KL.
Air Asia departs from the other terminal. The facilities are quite basic but very crowded and chaotic. It's a far cry from the under-utilised KLIA. The terminal is meant to handle 9 million passengers annually but more like 15 million now.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Would you Dare?
Bekam is actually a sunnah, or following our prophet's example. It is said to maintain the chemical balance in the body or even facilitate the cure of a number of ailments. The only shop that I know which offer this in KL is located at Ampang Park. The after effect on the skin is not a nice sight to see though, takes a few days for the scar to disappear. I have never been convinced of traditional medicine until this one. Worth a try.
On a different subject, one thing we found quite interesting at the new and sleek Pavilion shopping centre is that there is a small surau but somewhat hidden from normal view. The sign at the door is the only sign that a surau exists, not even mentioned in the electronic building directory. Wonder why? It's at 5th floor, next to Cannon shop. I only knew it because my bro-in-law told me so. Inside, the surau is actually quite nice.
Jalan Jalan Cari Makan
Watching Batman
KL is in the middle of a monsoon. The weather is always one of downcast and when it rains, it rains big time, but mainly in the evenings. So overall the weather was pleasant. Even when it is hot, it is not so humid as in Brunei. It's probably because Brunei is sitting quite close to the sea.
Each house costs at least 2 million ringgits 3 years ago, it is now 4 million ringgits. That would have been an excellent investment. In fact the demand for this type of housing is still quite strong. A few of our countrymen bought some properties around here.
Sri Hartamas and the areas around here like Bukit Kiara are really nice wooded residential areas not too far from the city centre. Drive to city centre during off-peak hours takes about 15 minutes. The new State Istana is being built just next to the compound. This would make the lands here even more expensive in the years to come.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Fish Spa Massage
Today was spending time at the Pavilion - a huge complex - big enough to spend the whole day inside. The food outlets are quite interesting and offer endless choices. We must have been eating continuously the whole day. Although today is a weekday, the complex in parts was still quite busy. Apparently the schools here are in the middle of their term break.
Monday, August 18, 2008
Weekdays in Lembah Kelang
Our first food adventure was at Star Hill for a late dinner. The place is still full of Middle Easterners on holidays far away from Western Europe or the States where negative perceptions of Islam and Muslims are growing. The place looks weird though. Scantily clad ladies and fully covered Arab ladies walking pass each others. This year though some 300,000 Middle Easterners are swarming KL.
Sunday Engagement
Proudly Made in Brunei
As all these products are what each of us consumes regularly, that would already been a worthwhile venture even if they could only capture the local market. To break-out into the global market, the people need to conduct differently in marketing their products. One needs to be more aggressive than just showing the products on display and giving free samples. We have been to such Halal product exhibition before conducted by a foreign company. They really went to detail planning, explaining the products, giving free samples and dropping few handouts as reminders to the visitors.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Long Road to KB
Today on Sunday, the volume of traffic is still quite high. There was even an accident, something that is hardly avoidable along this road. Inevitable the accident caused a traffic jam.
Middle of Syaaban
Later we went to a doa ceremony for a young relative who is soon going to Michigan University. Indeed our country has lot of talented 'gems', many are hidden and forever not found. This young lady went to local primary and district secondary schools, has proven that the difference is actually in the mind. No doubt if she was given the same level of opportunity and facilities she would also achieved the same. But she didn't received that. Which prove that it's all in the mind - the will power to succeed. Unless people are willing to change themselves, have the self motivation, one would not realise own potential. She excelled in her studies and is now going to a far off place that she would not have imagined before. All the best to her.
What’s in the Curry?
Having lunch with Dr Rock, now more of an urban species with his colourful tie and paper mountain than an outdoor ranger, the conversation revolved around the trends and opportunities abound in the society today. There are so many get rich quick schemes nowadays that those who have spare money get ever richer and money is so easy.
I have not heard of DINA before, an investment company owned by an Ustaz from
http://aibim.com/content/view/32/1/
What ever it is, right or wrong, while we engross ourselves to make our selves ever richer in this world, let’s not forget those who are not doing well. These are some of the things that are widening the gap between the have and have-nots. Let’s also do our bits to these people in whatever way. Lets not just ignore them. Live is full of trial and tribulation whilst we live in this transitory world...
Thursday, August 14, 2008
The Bleeding Heart
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
To Learn is to Begin
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Bros and Sis
Today the weather has been pleasant after the big downpour yesterday. Driving in such condition was quite hazardous as there were still lots of water puddles due to many potholes and uneven surfaces. These were specially so along the Tutong-Jerudong highway. And obviously quite dangerous and no wonder there were so many accidents along this stretch of road.
Monday, August 11, 2008
The Famous 'Ban'
Ban 3 is famous for always in the spotlight of being a ghastly flooded hotspot in Brunei. But not many people know that this area used to be one of the biggest paddy plantation area in the country - until it got converted into a large stretch of residential area. In the old days in the 70's, when yours truly lived nearby this place and spent a good part of the day playing in the paddy field, this area used to be routinely flooded by diverting water from the nearby river. An artificial dam was built on the river to divert water into a well maintained irrigation system.
AKBS Book Launching
Ugama students started to be sent to Madrasah Al Juned in Singapore in the 50's. But it was only in 1965 that Malay and English stream students from a tender age of 12 years old started to be sent to Singapore. Why Singapore? One of the (probable) reason was because just before that time in September 1963 Brunei decided not to join the union of Malay states aka Malaysia!
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Tetamu Istimewa
I missed the Majlis Ilmu week. From the web I found this article about what ‘Negara Zikir’ is about. It was a paper presented by the State Mufti, Pehin Dato Paduka Seri Setia Doctor Ustaz Haji Abdul Aziz. Among other things, he said that zikir is a great word, a paramount word and a word of purity. This is because it comes from Allah the Al-Mighty and portrayed very clearly in the Holy Al-Quran. The State Mufti pointed that those who practise the zikir are regarded by Allah as people of common sense or intellectuals. When such people do exist in a country, then there’s no doubt that such a country is a country of zikir where the masses always and lively practise the zikir. It is a country rich with zikir, administered through zikir, protected and maintained with zikir, and its knowledge, economy and social affairs are also of zikir.
The effort is good and should be applauded. Lets hope there are no exception to the rule when we start to embrace the concept.
Masjid Hassanal Bolkiah
This is my old place of solace. I stopped by for Maghrib on the first evening here and met many familiar faces, actually something like 30 of them, the regular jemaah. Everyone were hugging me. It was great to see these guys.
Today is Sunday. No wedding invitation but next week will be busy. We topped up the fuel tank. $21.50 ...that's 10 Euro. In Europe we would easily forked out 80 Euros for full tank. Not sure whether here we should be pleased with that or an opportunity missed by the Government to let the populace understands that the outside world has actually changed. We'll keep our mind open.
My first impression of Brunei a year gone - didn’t sense much changes. I presume I'm totally wrong here. May be. But then I thought there is this thing called RKN meaning to carry us to be the top 10 countries in the world some day. In the evening I watched the opening ceremony of the Olympic – what a spectacular display. 204 countries participated. But I won't be tracking the Olympic – I am not into these multi events things.
Welcome Home
Flying pass Brunei, I could spot our house - it's the one on the top left in the photo. The zoom lens worked well, although it must have been still about 5000 feet above and a few kilometres away when I took the shot.
Will be a busy few weeks to see relatives and friends and food places...., getting few things done here and there. The fight from Amsterdam to KL was not full. It must be mid Summer as the holiday season is waning or the airline industry is now starting to feel the pinch from the gloomy state of economics and higher prices of things nowadays.
Thursday, August 7, 2008
A good Article to Read
This is an excellent article from Wall Street Journal on above. With the high oil price, governments are clamouring to gain more out of the current situation. European governments are already taking as much as 80% profit out what customers pay at the pump station.What Is a 'Windfall' Profit?
August 4, 2008
The "windfall profits" tax is back, with Barack Obama stumping again to apply it to a handful of big oil companies. Which raises a few questions: What is a "windfall" profit anyway? How does it differ from your everyday, run of the mill profit? Is it some absolute number, a matter of return on equity or sales -- or does it merely depends on who earns it?
Enquiring entrepreneurs want to know. Unfortunately, Mr. Obama's "emergency" plan, announced on Friday, doesn't offer any clarity. To pay for "stimulus" checks of $1,000 for families and $500 for individuals, the Senator says government would take "a reasonable share" of oil company profits.
Mr. Obama didn't bother to define "reasonable," and neither did Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Senate Democrat, when he recently declared that "The oil companies need to know that there is a limit on how much profit they can take in this economy." Really? This extraordinary redefinition of free-market success could use some parsing.
Take Exxon Mobil, which on Thursday reported the highest quarterly profit ever and is the main target of any "windfall" tax surcharge. Yet if its profits are at record highs, its tax bills are already at record highs too. Between 2003 and 2007, Exxon paid $64.7 billion in U.S. taxes, exceeding its after-tax U.S. earnings by more than $19 billion. That sounds like a government windfall to us, but perhaps we're missing some Obama-Durbin business subtlety.
Maybe they have in mind profit margins as a percentage of sales. Yet by that standard Exxon's profits don't seem so large. Exxon's profit margin stood at 10% for 2007, which is hardly out of line with the oil and gas industry average of 8.3%, or the 8.9% for U.S. manufacturing (excluding the sputtering auto makers).
If that's what constitutes windfall profits, most of corporate America would qualify. Take aerospace or machinery -- both 8.2% in 2007. Chemicals had an average margin of 12.7%. Computers: 13.7%. Electronics and appliances: 14.5%. Pharmaceuticals (18.4%) and beverages and tobacco (19.1%) round out the Census Bureau's industry rankings. The latter two double the returns of Big Oil, though of course government has already became a tacit shareholder in Big Tobacco through the various legal settlements that guarantee a revenue stream for years to come.
In a tax bill on oil earlier this summer, no fewer than 51 Senators voted to impose a 25% windfall tax on a U.S.-based oil company whose profits grew by more than 10% in a single year and wasn't investing enough in "renewable" energy. This suggests that a windfall is defined by profits growing too fast. No one knows where that 10% came from, besides political convenience. But if 10% is the new standard, the tech industry is going to have to rethink its growth arc. So will LG, the electronics company, which saw its profits, grow by 505% in 2007. Abbott Laboratories hit 110%.
If Senator Obama is as exercised about "outrageous" profits as he says he is, he might also have to turn on a few liberal darlings. Oh, say, Berkshire Hathaway. Warren Buffett's outfit pulled in $11 billion last year, up 29% from 2006. Its profit margin -- if that's the relevant figure -- was 11.47%, which beats out the American oil majors.
Or consider Google, which earned a mere $4.2 billion but at a whopping 25.3% margin. Google earns far more from each of its sales dollars than does Exxon, but why doesn't Mr. Obama consider its advertising-search windfall worthy of special taxation?
The fun part about this game is anyone can play. Jim Johnson, formerly of Fannie Mae and formerly a political fixer for Mr. Obama, reaped a windfall before Fannie's multibillion-dollar accounting scandal. Bill Clinton took down as much as $15 million working as a rainmaker for billionaire financier Ron Burkle's Yucaipa Companies. This may be the very definition of "windfall."
General Electric profits by investing in the alternative energy technology that Mr. Obama says Congress should subsidize even more heavily than it already does. GE's profit margin in 2007 was 10.3%, about the same as profiteering Exxon's. Private-equity shops like Khosla Ventures and Kleiner Perkins, which recently hired Al Gore, also invest in alternative energy start-ups, though they keep their margins to themselves. We can safely assume their profits are lofty, much like those of George Soros's investment funds.
The point isn't that these folks (other than Mr. Clinton) have something to apologize for, or that these firms are somehow more "deserving" of windfall tax extortion than Big Oil. The point is that what constitutes an abnormal profit is entirely arbitrary. It is in the eye of the political beholder, who is usually looking to soak some unpopular business. In other words, a windfall is nothing more than a profit earned by a business that some politician dislikes. And a tax on that profit is merely a form of politically motivated expropriation.
A Bunch of Hypocrites
Now that the Olympic Games is about to start there are lots of documentaries and TV news painting the many other situations in China. Not far from the agenda always is about human rights abuse. Western journalists especially the Brits are trying to highlight human right abuses as much as possible in this incredibly fast transformed economic giant. The journalists would go around interviewing specific individuals particularly to talk about Tiananmen Square incident, human rights and so on. Imagine somebody doing this during London Olympic 2012, filming the pathetic part of London or foul of the British Government or asking human right abuses committed in the colonial period. The irony is more often than not law breakers like the two British and two American protestors who climbed a pole and put on a Free Tibet banner seems to be painted as good citizen, and were doing the right thing. Imagine a Chinese guy doing that at the Olympic game in London protesting the expansion of Heathrow airport. Or Brazilians protesting in front of the Olympic village the wrong shooting of fellow citizen by police in London a year ago.One Chinese official said that there are still human right abuses in China but China has also changed. It cannot transform everything overnight. It’s like a super tanker; you cannot just turn around just like that. It takes quite a while. Saying that, China actually had achieved by providing one of the basic human rights – taking 300 million people out of poverty in the last 20 years. That was a massive achievement. The other good sign is that Chinese who left the country years ago, in disgust at the lack of opportunity, lack of freedom, official red tapes and so on are coming back in droves.
Saturday, August 2, 2008
The Power of Internet
Nowadays with the power of internet, one could track the news back home through people’s blog much better than the normal media. That is great. Two things that dominate Bruneian blog scene – photography and food. There are lots of excellent photos to look at – really beautiful and spectacular shots. For me, I am not into it. I rarely use my SLR. A pocket camera is more often good enough for me. Although I did have a proper SLR (Minolta X-700) when I was 15. It was a top model at that time!http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minolta_X-700
It’s good to see people are really into internet although the penetration of users is still at a low level in Brunei. It’s also good that the country is starting into action in its e-Government initiative.
Anyway back to the power of internet, I came across a couple of occasions that people mentioned, mostly indirectly in their blogs, about the food and coupon clamour. I was reading about the Prophet’s journey or Isra Miraj.
“In the seventh heaven, Prophet Muhammad saw Sidrat al-Muntaha--a very big tree of sidr. Then the Prophet ascended to what is beyond the seven skies; he entered Paradise. He saw examples of the inhabitants of Paradise and how their situation would be. He saw most of the inhabitants of Paradise are the poor people”
Just as for my personal reflection, a lot of fingers and shame were pointed to those people in both incidents for their ‘indecent’ behaviours. Let’s step aback. Lets reflect to what the Prophet observed during the journey regarding the majority of inhabitants of Paradise. Are we all not guilty here by judging people unnecessarily?
Friday, August 1, 2008
Tanglin Hill Reminiscence
Nonetheless it was a place where I spent a good part of my younger years away from family. It was then part of the government scheme to send selected students both from Malay, English and Ugama streams to study in Singapore from the age of 12. The scheme started sometimes in the 50’s but was stopped in the mid 80’s as Brunei had rapidly developed its local education institutions and built enough capability.
While on transit in 2001, I took a taxi to see how the place would look like after last seeing it for 20 years. I took a few snapshot of the place I called home from the limit of the gate. Indeed the place has been neglected and in disrepair. I don’t know how it looks now whether the government has done anything with this site – whatever - this highly valuable asset must be worth a fortune in land scarce Singapore. Indeed we are blessed with all the richness but not able to keep or look after things like this.
Has the scheme worked? Looking around nowadays, they are not many familiar faces that I know that really feature in both the Government and private sectors apart from a few. So where have these guys gone? These were supposed to be the cream of their time. My assumption is if you do an art stream, you would end up becoming an administrator and would have a fairly good chance to progressed quickly up the ladder. But most of the English stream guys end up doing science subjects and indeed many have excelled in these fields and remains in that fields. For me, I am happy with what I am doing and keeping my grey matter useful, whilst helping another developing nation and a big profitable company happy. That company made 7.9 billion dollars profit in the last 3 months.



