Tuesday, October 25, 2011

LIBYA & GADDAFI... Facts That Cant be Denied...

As most of us would know by now, Col. Muammar Gaddafi passed away tragically.. Gaddafi has been my icon since I was a little kid.. My father named me after him because few weeks before I was born, which is on April 15 1986.. Operation El dorado Canyon takes place or the united states bombing of Libya.. Shortly after his inauguration in 1981, Libya was a strong priority for Ronald Reagan. Gaddafi was firmly anti-Israel and had supported extremist groups in Palestine and Syria. There were reports that Libya was attempting to become a nuclear power and his occupation of Chad, which was rich in uranium, was a major fear for the United States. Gaddafi's alignment with the Soviet Union and his ambitions to set up a federation of Arab and Muslim states in North Africa were also alarming to the US.. My father once told me that he heard from the news that the US bombed Gaddafi's house but he survive.. I cant imagine the heroic moment when Gaddafi came out from his house after the bombing.. It was an honor for me to be given this name and I shall protect it.. 


there is few facts that i think you guys should know despite all the news saying that Gaddafi is so cruel and bad... :-



1. There is no electricity bill in Libya; electricity is free
for all its citizens.

2. There is no interest on loans, banks in Libya are
state-owned and loans given
to all its citizens at 0% interest by law.

3. Home considered a human right in Libya –
Gaddafi vowed that his parents
would not get a house until everyone in Libya had a
home. Gaddafi’s father has
died while him, his wife and his mother are still living
in a tent.

4. All newlyweds in Libya receive $60,000 Dinar (US$
50,000 ) by the government
to buy their first apartment so to help start up the
family.

5. Education and medical treatments are free in
Libya. Before Gaddafi only 25%
of Libyans are literate. Today the figure is 83%.

6. Should Libyans want to take up farming career,
they would receive farming
land, a farming house, equipments, seeds and
livestock to kick- start their farms
– all for free.

7. If Libyans cannot find the education or medical
facilities they need in Libya,
the government funds them to go abroad for it –
not only free but they get US
$2, 300/mth accommodation and car allowance.

8. In Libyan, if a Libyan buys a car, the government
subsidized 50% of the price.

9. The price of petrol in Libya is $0. 14 per liter.

10. Libya has no external debt and its reserves
amount to $150 billion – now
frozen globally.

11. If a Libyan is unable to get employment after
graduation the state would
pay the average salary of the profession as if he or
she is employed until
employment is found.

12. A portion of Libyan oil sale is, credited directly to
the bank accounts of all
Libyan citizens.

13. A mother who gave birth to a child receive US
$5 ,000

14. 40 loaves of bread in Libya costs $ 0.15

15. 25% of Libyans have a university degree

16. Gaddafi carried out the world’s largest irrigation
project, known as the Great
Man-Made River project, to make water readily
available throughout the desert
country.



is this..who you call a monster? the news made him look like how most of us do.but the same source as to who the media belongs to are the same people that killed him.half of us could agree that the media's pure bullshit,don't we..i refuse to believe that cruelty is an attribute alongside humanity.today's day an age is an age we call ZAMAN FITAN,the age of LIES.



By: Rauuf Bajrai

One more thing, Gaddafi's son, Saif manage to escape and now at large.. the United Nations and the NTC did not manage to arrest him.. Do you really think that Saif can really escape just like that..?? Well.. think again.. for me.. it was the UN intentions for not capturing Saif.. He is not that reliable.. I make my assumptions with the facts that....


"I
n July 2008, Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam announced that an agreement was being negotiated with the United States whereby Libya would make any future compensation payments to American victims of terror attacks conditional upon the settlement of claims by victims of the U.S. bombing of Libya in 1986. On August 14, 2008 the resultant U.S.-Libya Comprehensive Claims Settlement Agreement was signed in Tripoli by Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern AffairsDavid Welch, and by Libya's Secretary for American Affairs, Ahmad Fituri."



This deal was done without Gaddafi's knowing.. Saif is the only Lybian who has a really good relationships with the US.. Educated at the London School of Economics and a fluent English speaker, Saif al-Islam was once seen by many governments as the acceptable, Western-friendly face of Libya. Before the rebellion, Saif al-Islam sometimes appeared genuinely at odds with Gadhafi senior, who ruled for 42 years through fear and violence.
Mainly through his charitable Gadhafi Foundation, Saif al-Islam pushed for reform, including more media freedom, acknowledgement of past rights abuses and the adoption of a constitution. He also oversaw a reconciliation with Islamist rebels who launched an insurgency in the 1990s.
But his efforts were stymied by opposition from inside the ruling elite and — some analysts say — from members of his own family. Last year the independent newspaper he helped to found was forced to mute its criticism of the authorities and his foundation withdrew from political activities.
One of his projects did succeed. He played a central role in negotiating the lifting of U.S. and European sanctions on Libya in 2004, in return for Tripoli ending its nuclear and chemical weapons programs.
This led to then British Prime Minister Tony Blair visiting Tripoli to embrace Gadhafi senior, long a pariah in the West.
Saif al-Islam owned a $16 million home in London, but his activities and friendships caused much embarrassment in the West when the rebellion broke out.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Life As I see it..

          Hye everyone, I set up this blog maybe in Oct 2010. I'm not an active user of this blog but I think i'll try to be an active user from now on.. I know that not many of you out there know me. Well, if you google my name, the only thing that popped up are about Col. Muammar Gaddafi.. haha sighh~~~... okay.. here a lil thing bout me...

          I'm currently on my 2nd year in Management And Science University and expected to finish my studies in 6 months time.. i'm taking Diploma In Investment Management.. Before this.. i've been working with MAS as a flight attendant for 5 years.. the experience I gained are very useful for the next chapter of my life as a student..
          In MSU, my friends are all younger than me.. the youngest is 18 and the eldest is 24.. btw, i'm 25 this year.. at first, I really feel I am better than them.. they should listen to me.. they should respect me.. but then, i just realize that " respect is for me to earn.. not ask..".. so I strive to earn the respect from them.. I once read a book by jack canfield.. he wrote that to be a good leader.. you must lead and influence people around you first..
           Life as a student is really challenging for me as I left school about 7 years ago rather than my other fellow student friends who are really fresh from school.. At first, it is really hard for me but i take it as a challenge.. I did not do well in my first semester where I only manage to score a CGPA of 2.95.. it was a sad moment when I first hold the exam result.. I show it to my mom.. and she just look with sad eyes.. all I can say to my self is I will try harder next time around.. Eventually, I got CGPA of 3.73 on my 2nd semester.. atlast, i've made my mom proud of the result.. 

           Here in MSU, my friends came from a different and exciting background.. My housemate who are also my classmate are the one who always had a good results.. he never failed a single subject and got on Dean's list every semester without fail.. I look at him as a challenger because I want to be the best among all of my friends.. I consider Ajeb is my best friend here.. We knew each other since the first day in class and with our parent's home are quite near to each other makes our friendship become closer... 

            My other best buddies are all my friends since we are in the primary school.. Now, they are all working and some had set up their own business... sometimes I'm jealous with some of my friends here who are really doing well with their job and having fun while doing it.. I feel the same when I was with MAS but now I just feel that i'm on the disadvantage and must sprint to the finish line to chase my other friends who are currently jogging to the end of the tunnel..

            Even though my friends in MSU are much younger than me, some of them has the ability to think like an adult.. I think at first I just assume that I experienced more in life than them would make me more knowledgeable than them.. I WAS WRONG !!!..they actually open up my mind and make me think that age is not a barrier for someone to be more knowledgeable than the other.. my 2 years experience being with them was a really meaningful period of my life.. we play hard.. and we study hard.. out of 8-10 of my close friends in MSU i think only 2 of them who got CGPA below 3.00... I learn  many things with them.. I learn how they think.. I learn how they react.. some of them are even better thinker than me.. HAHAHAH..

Well.. i think its enough for now.. will come back with a good topics really soon..

Monday, September 12, 2011

Reverse Centralisation and Restore check and balance


Tengku Razaleigh Speaks.19 June 2011

1. Malaysia's post-colonial history began with optimism and a grand hope in 1957. When Tunku Abdul Rahman, the first Prime Minister of Malaysia, proclaimed our Independence at the Merdeka Stadium in the unforgettable words that "Malaysia is a parliamentary democracy with an independent judiciary," he had a vision of a happy people in spite of the formidable economic problems we needed to solve. After that dawn of independence, there was a search of how we could achieve this happy society, Fulfilling the needs and aspirations of all Malaysians which was to continue for the Generations to come. He symbolized the concept and conviction of generational responsibility in his vision.

2. Tunku Abdul Rahman and his generation were dedicated leaders, not for power but a sense of duty to the present and the future. They were not in politics for the money or for themselves. Indeed, even after they had assumed power, they never used their position to benefit themselves or their families, nor did they build loyal cronies who would act as their financiers or hold any wealth unlawfully earned at the expense of the people.

3. The guiding philosophy was responsibility of public office. Public office was seen as a duty, not as an opportunity. The public office was also part of their sense of political commitment to create a Malaysia that was fair, just, cohesive, and balanced. This was combined by a deep conviction of generational responsibility for those who would come after them.

4. One of the greatest losses in public life and in politics today in Malaysia is that loss of generational responsibility. Everything seems to be surrounded by greed and the desire to be billionaires. This had led to a pyramid of cronies within the incumbent political parties and their associates in business. It is this combination of the hierarchy of political cronies and business cronies that led to the centralization of power in the incumbent political leadership and in the office of the Prime Minister.

5. This power in one individual allowed the manipulation of the political system; I mean by this the institutions of power including the media. In exchange for the centralization of power greed and self-interest was encouraged by example and in the guise of racial loyalty deserving rewards. This is the case in all the parties within the power structure. This state of affairs is one of the most dangerous and difficult to dismantle because there has been three decades of centralized power.

6. The political style that has dominated in these lost three decades has been "double-think" and "double-talk". One of the features which is alarming in this plan to maintain status quo is the encouragement covertly of racial and religious obscurantism. The underlying theme was a policy of using a balance of racialism and religion on the one hand and talks of unity on the other hand in order to make the people hostage to the status quo of power. As a result, racialism and racial concerns seem to have a grip on all aspects of our lives, in politics, economics, education and employment, irrespective of the present reality which has got nothing to do with race or religion. We are deliberately made to feel that we are hostage to these forces.

7. Freedom of speech and expression of our political concerns to change the atmosphere are restrained by how it will be interpreted by those who want to deny us the right to differ. Article 10 of the Constitution which guarantees this freedom is almost non-existence or subject to fear of retaliation or defamation. Legal suits intended to silence legitimate concerns of public responsibility are increasingly used. Unfortunately, our judicial system has forgotten the fundamental importance of Article 10 to the democratic life of Malaysia. Common sense seems to have been taken out of the law.

8. On the economic front, income inequality in Malaysia has widened. Some studies suggest that Malaysia's inequality is wider than Thailand's or Indonesia's. Historically, the concern was about ownership and control of the economy. It was the view of some that if ownership was de-racialized or balanced at the top, economic justice would follow. It is no longer a valid premise for the future. Income inequality is no longer a problem between races; it crosses the racial divide and it is a problem of the majority of Malaysians who feel the pressure of inflation in almost every essential aspect of their lives, challenging their wellbeing of themselves, their families, and their future. Today and the in the near future, this is the most serious challenge we face. It is not an easy challenge to overcome. It is a time when Malaysia needs leadership of the highest quality and of those who have the moral courage to change and re-think our economic policies.

9. It is in these circumstances that we face the serious problem of rising food prices, inflation in price of houses compounded by shortage in housing for the vast majority of young Malaysians. Lack of economic expansion to give all levels an opportunity to use their talents to seek work that is commensurate with their contribution, their needs of daily life, and to narrow the inequality gap, is the threat of the future. Therefore, we should be concerned about the justification of the removal of subsidies that affects the low income because that will further widen the inequality and open the society to social disorder and disintegration, and increase social in cohesion. It is in this context that I raise the issue about Independent Power Production Companies (IPP). The privatization contracts are today protected by the Official Secrets Act, and therefore we are unable to really know whether or not the public and PETRONAS, as trustees of the public, are directly or indirectly subsidizing these companies and the tycoons who are benefitting at the expense of the public.

10. Related to the question of the withdrawal of subsidies is the deficit that the Government suffers from in managing the economy. This question cannot be separated from the way that the Government has managed the nation's finances. If the deficit is as a result of wastage, corruption and extravagance in the use of public funds, then the solution to the problem should not be passed on to the public. What is needed is a reexamination of the management of the country's finances before taking any drastic steps that would affect the well-being of the people. We need to know the reality behind the apparent subsidies that are given to the public and its relationship in the totality of the management of the public finance. Only after we know the truth – and the whole truth – should any change in the policy of subsidies be implemented, as the consequences would have life-changing impact on the livelihood of the people. In the circumstances of rising inflation in food, stagnation of the economy and income, we should not do anything that would widen the disparity of income which would cause social instability.

11. The challenge today is for the return to generational responsibility in politics and public office. This can only be achieved if we have democracy and parliamentary power which is responsible. Democracy was the basis of the founding of the state of Malaysia by the Constitution in 1957. When it was briefly suspended in 1969, the leaders of that generation were uneasy, and they restored democracy as soon as possible.

12. That is because they realized that democracy has an intrinsic value in creating a citizenship that is not made up of sheep but of responsible citizens. Only responsible citizenship that understands democracy can bring about stability, cohesion and economic prosperity. During those days, it was ingrained in that generation of leaders that democracy was not only a form but a value system that respected the essential institutions of democracy like the independence of judiciary, the supremacy of parliament subject to the Constitution, the respect for fundamental rights, and free speech. They also understood the meaning and primacy of the rule of law and not of men. They also knew that democracy is the common heritage of humanity that we inherited and have a duty to continue. The law that they understood was also from the common heritage of all civilized nations.

13. And one of our inheritances is the common law system of the rule of law which is enshrined in our constitution. They knew that the phrase "common law" meant the wisdom that is passed to us in the progress of law and the values that are encapsulated in the law governing public office and responsibility to society. That laws are meant to enhance democracy and freedom but not to maintain and continue political power that is inconsistent with the rule of law and the constitution.

14. Independence did not come with peace but with very difficult problems, particularly the management of the economy and transforming it to bring about a balance between all the racial groups. They realize that some of their problems had roots in the history of Malaysia. There was a serious imbalance between the countryside and the urban sector with racial dimensions which were too sharp. Indeed, poverty was also quite prevalent. There were open discussions and experiments.

15. Some of you may remember that one of the highlights of public debate was organized at the University of Malaya under the title, "The Great Economic Debate" every year. That disappeared with the changes in the University & Colleges Act and the decline of Universities' autonomy. The search was to eradicate a sense of inequality between the various peoples of Malaysia, whether because of one's identity and social origins, or for other reasons.

16. It was as part of this search that during Tun Abdul Razak's time, the Second Malaysia Plan was launched in 1971. We need to be reminded of the objective of that plan: "National unity is the over-riding objective of the country. A stage has been reached in the nation's economic and social development where greater emphasis must be placed on social integration and more equitable distribution of income and opportunities for national unity."

17. That dream was slowly eroded from the mid-1980. The hope that we had at that time is now challenged in the most serious way.

18. Recently, PETRONAS announced that it had made a 90.5 billion pre-tax profit. If we accumulate the profit of PETRONAS over the years, it would come to a mind-boggling figure of billions and billions. Yet, the greatest poverty is found in the petroleum producing states of Kelantan, Terengganu, Sarawak, and Sabah. This moral inconsistency in a way exemplifies how the nation's economy is mismanaged and how the institutions set up in the 1970's have lost their objective and commitment to solving the immediate and pressing problems of the nation.

19. PETRONAS was set up with the objective of serving the nation's interest as a priority. It was never intended to give PETRONAS a life of its own as an incorporated company for selected individuals to profit at the expense of the national interest, nor was it the objective to allow PETRONAS a cooperate existence independent of national interest. 20. What is needed is for institutions like PETRONAS is to have a national focus rather than maintain a multinational status. The aim of making PETRONAS a multinational cooperation at the expense of national interest is contrary to the Petroleum Development Act. PETRONAS should have a Petroleum Advisory Council to advise the Prime Minister on the operation of the law as well as the management and utilization of its resources as spelt out in the Petroleum Development Act.

21. Another example of the abuse of power is the privatization of certain government institutions which were set up as a public service to serve the people. Bernas is one example of a privatization of an essential commodity as a monopoly for a group of people and owned partially by two companies in Hong Kong. An essential commodity such as rice should not have been privatized for business purposes. We are the only rice producing country that has privatized and given as a monopoly to one company the importation and distribution of all rice products.

22. The reality today is Thailand and Indonesia are self-sufficient in rice and we are dependent on 30% of imported rice. But because it is a monopoly, imported rice is cheaper in Singapore than Malaysia. Privatization for the benefit of private individuals to profit from such an essential commodity is a clear abuse of power. It would not have happened in those days. But with the centralization of power in the office of the prime Minister who had the party under his absolute control, anything was possible!

23. I will suggest to you that there was a deliberate plan to centralize power in the leadership in a surreptitious manner. Unfortunately the nature of racial politics blinded us of the reality behind certain policies and conduct of leaders at that time. The decline of democracy, the abuse of power, and the mismanagement of our economy and the nation's finances, the economic waste, the lack of national cohesion in our economic policies led to the flight of capital in the region of RM880 billion over the years from the 1980s. That was the beginning the lost decades and the full impact of the consequences of the economic policies which has continued since then, is yet to have its full impact on our national lives. And when it does the consequences are unpredictable.

24. The centralization of power in the office of the Prime Minister and the Attorney general had a major role in this state of affairs. The challenge today is to reverse the centralization of power and restore the check and balance of a genuine democracy.
25. We need to reclaim as citizens of Malaysia our rights in a democracy; that power and authority are positions of trust and responsibility, not to serve personal interest or as an opportunity for personal enrichment. We need to reassert as politically active and responsible citizens the concept of social obligation and public service in those who seek political office. Power is duty, NOT a prize.

26. We need to rethink our economic policies. Particularly in the focusing on the national objectives that are urgent; economic policies is not only about wealth creation but needs to have a moral dimension which takes into account the wellbeing of all citizens as the ultimate priority over profits.

27. I have given you a broad sweep of the past and a bird's eye view of the looming problems of managing our economy as it is today. I hope this will open a dialogue which benefits all of us.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The Shocking truth.. A must watch Video !!


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — The young man who claims opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim sodomized him acknowledged in court Monday that he had met with Malaysia’s prime minister four days before making a police complaint against Anwar.
The defense hopes that Saiful Bukhari Azlan’s testimony under cross-examination will bolster its contention that the sodomy trial against Anwar is a political conspiracy masterminded by Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife.
Saiful’s admission that he met with Najib proves “the issue of conspiracy by Najib and higher-ups in the government,” Anwar told reporters after the hearing.
Sodomy, even between consenting adults, is a crime in this Muslim-majority nation. If convicted, Anwar faces 20 years in prison that could end the career of the veteran politician who has aspirations to become the prime minister.
The trial, which resumed Monday after a three-month break, has attracted international attention. Amnesty International has called it a sham.
“When a country like Malaysia uses this (sodomy accusation) against the leader of its political opposition, it smacks of political persecution as well,” said Lance Lattig, an Amnesty researcher.
Saiful, 24, claims he was sodomized several times by Anwar in 2008 but did not go to police. Instead, he discussed it with Najib, who was then the deputy prime minister, on June 24, 2008.
“I went to him (Najib) to complain about my problem, my dilemma,” Saiful testified.
He claims he was sodomized again by Anwar on June 26, 2008 and that he made a police complaint on June 28.
Anwar, a 62-year-old married father of six children, is on trial for the alleged incident on June 26 only.
Najib acknowledges meeting Saiful at his home but says he offered no advice. Saiful knew one of his officers, who arranged the meeting. Saiful came as an “ordinary citizen who wanted to tell me something,” Najib told reporters in 2008.
Anwar challenged Najib to appear in court to explain the details of the meeting. Few details of the meeting are known, and questions remains as to how a common citizen like Saiful managed to meet a powerful politican like Najib at his home.
“It will be a futile trial if he chooses to use his influence … not to appear in court with (wife) Rosmah,” Anwar said. He added his lawyers will also show that Rosmah had met Saiful previously, a claim that the first lady and Saiful have denied.
It is the second time that Anwar has been accused of sodomy. In 1998, he lost his post as deputy prime minister and spent six years in jail for sodomy and abuse of power. He was freed in 2004 when a court overturned the sodomy conviction. Two years ago, Anwar led a three-party opposition alliance to major gains in elections.
Najib denies Anwar’s claim that he is a victim of a government conspiracy to undermine the opposition alliance, which hopes to win power in national elections scheduled to be held by 2013.
Anwar’s lawyers point to some contradictions in Saiful’s testimony. One medical report says Saiful initially told a doctor a plastic object had been inserted in his anus.
On Monday, Saiful said the doctor was lying and had fabricated the report

Bakun Dam ‘Unsafe’! – Exclusive Evidence on Corner-Cutting and Sloppy Construction Practices

Devastating information has come into the hands of Sarawak Report, which throws terrifying doubt over the safety of the Bakun Dam!
Inside information, which includes documents, photographs and videos, has been passed over to us by former a Quality Controller, who says concerns about sloppy procedures and cost-cutting measures were ignored by the bosses at Sinohydro.
It is well-known that the Chinese contractors were under extreme pressure from the Malaysian Government during the period up to 2009 to get the dam finished as quickly and cheaply as possible, after a series of delays and cost over-runs.
The informant who spoke to Sarawak Report told us:
“We compromised all the time to speed up the project”
The total failure of Quality Control that amounted to negligence
Ready to inundate - Bakun was Taib s pet project. It has been bailed out by the Employee Provident Fund, Malaysia s main public service pension fund.
Bakun has been filling since last October and it is now just 15 meters short of full inundation.  An area the size of Singapore has been flooded to accommodate the hydro-electric project, which sits up-river of tens of thousands of inhabitants, including  the major city of Sibu.
However many believe that it will turn out to be a White Elephant as no genuine use has been found to justify its construction.  Now the whole integrity of the project is thrown into question by the major concerns our information will now raise over the safety of its construction.
The key problem, according to our informant, has been a total failure of the Quality Control measures, which are supposed to ensure the dam is built to proper specifications.
He complains that there were “definitely not enough” Quality Controllers hired for the project and that therefore it was impossible to carry out adequate supervision across the many different work points on the enormous site.
Dams are constructed according to carefully calculated specifications, he explained, particularly with regard to the mix of ingredients for the concrete that is used.  The quality of the concrete is vital for the strength and safety of the structure and the so-called ‘design’ of the preparation takes into account the specific conditions of the particular project.
Dangerous short-cuts and cost-cutting
There were two dangerous malpractices that have been particularly highlighted by the Quality Controller, who has spoken to us.  First, he says the contractors habitually substituted higher grade mix with lower grade cement in the composition of the concrete to save money.
“When you prepare concrete you need to add water, sand and aggregate and the process must carefully follow the design and quantities of all the ingredients”, he explained.  “You also need to put in chemicals to strengthen the concrete and make it slow to harden.  Any deviation or substitution of lower grade materials can seriously compromise the quality of the concrete”.
Secondly, he says that when the mixed concrete was then taken from the batching plant in cement carriers to be pumped into the dam, workers were then responsible for another regular malpractice that was endemic on the project and had far-reaching implications. This was the adding of extra water to the mix to make it more fluid and easier to pump.  He would reject batches of concrete that he caught being weakened in this way, however he says that he knew that with so little over-all supervision on the site many others got through.
Rejected - this batch of concrete was rejected by the Quality Controller because water was introduced, but its believed many more got through.
The informant has provided us with numerous photographs of this practice taking place at the dam site and has also sent us video, clearly showing workers hosing in water into the cement carriers.
“They did this practice all the time when I was not around.  It happened all over.  They were doing it to make it easier to pump the concrete and to stop their pumps blocking”.
The Quality Controller explained what dam experts have confirmed to Sarawak Report, which is that any tampering with the mix of the concrete at this stage undermines the strength of the concrete and forms a serious risk.
Watering concrete
The UK construction expert Dr Andy Hughes from the company Atkins Global acknowledges that there is a frequent temptation for workers on dam sites to water the concrete, which is hard to handle in the correct state:
“People will cut corners, which is why you have supervision”, he said.  “Any watering of concrete should be rare on a dam site and it should be controlled and done for a specific purpose”.
When we explained the practice at Bakun by workers on site, he insisted “Any changes should be done in a managed way.  The most important thing is that you have consistency across the dam.  If they were doing it ad hoc in a patchwork quilt all over the dam you would not know where the strengths and weaknesses are”.
At it again. Our informant says this is another occasion when he caught workers watering down the concrete, but that his bosses did not take it seriously.
Dr Atkins surmised that the actions by the workers might have been further prompted by the tampering that was taking place earlier in the process, which would have altered the consistency of the concrete.
“If they have changed the ingredients they may need more water. It is like playing around with the ingredients of a cake”, he explained.  “The specification will have been designed according to the conditions of the area and the nature of the available materials.  Any changing of the design mix should have gone through a formal process”.
The bosses ‘didn’t want to know’
Our informant tells us that he constantly reported the problems to his bosses at Sinohydro, including at their daily meetings.  However he got little response or support:
“I used to raise this issue and nobody took any notice of it.  They would just say ‘OK let it go, warn them not to do it next time’, that is all”, he told us. “If I found them adding water to the concrete I would reject it as sub-standard, but I could not be everywhere all the time and I know it was happening when I was not there”.
Sarawak Report has photographs of these rejection notices (see above), reporting that water had been added to the concrete.  However our insider is certain that the vast majority of this tampered mix was not rejected and was used in the construction of the dam.
Dangerous negligence that undermines the safety of Bakun
Powerful energy - starting to fill up.
Our investigations have shown that the seriousness of these findings cannot be under-estimated in terms of the long-term and short-term safety of the dam.  Our informant confirms that:
“The mix was used for the spillway, the intake point, the plunge pool and the face slab, which are all very critical features of the dam.  If these features of the dam give way then the reservoir will break”.
It is a prognosis confirmed by Dr Andy Hughes, who acts as a spokesman for the British Dam Society.  Bakun is a concrete faced, rock filled dam.  The concrete is laid in slabs with critical joins.  He told us:
“The integrity of that slabbing on the upstream face is what keeps the water back.  This is a critical element and there have been numerous problems with the cracking of the upstream membranes of these dams, particularly in South America… Personally, I always worry about the design of these things as we are still not sure how to really design them”
Hughes went on to say:
“The spill-way in particular is also very important.  It has to have very high strength concrete, because of the high velocity of the water passing through.  There are very high forces here”.
High time to investigate !
For years Sinohydro and the construction contractors have refused to take adequate action in response to the official complaints of under-resourced Quality Controllers at Bakun.  Now the project is completed, the dam is being filled and the story is out.
This is not the only safety issue related to the construction of the dam.  It has already been raised as a matter of concern that Bakun has been constructed in a region comprising several fault lines that could be strained by the added load of the water.  Minor tremors have been recently recorded, but these issues have been likewise ignored.
Tens of thousands of people live down river , culminating in the major coastal city of Sibu.  To refuse to thoroughly investigate concerns raised by the projects own experts would be a form of negligence of the utmost seriousness.
There has been yet another attack on Sarawak Report today.  This time our site was temporarily disabled by a deliberate hacking exercise.  We suggest the proper avenue for the authorities is to address this issue and the many other serious matters that we have been trying to raise in recent weeks and not to persist in trying to shut us up instead.