Showing posts with label Donald Lim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donald Lim. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Donald Lim .... and the Nexus of Evil

Donald Duck and looney tunes ?.

9th Octb 2007


Sithru Sdn Bhd and PJI Holdings have jointly clinched a US$350mil (RM1bil) deal to construct a 17km highway in Sri Lanka.
A letter of intent was recently awarded to Sithru by the Sri Lanka government for the construction.
Sithru managing director S. Thiruneelakanda said the letter of award for the project, yet to be issued, would be given to both parties.
"We hope to start the project by early next year," he added at the signing of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Sithru and PJI in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday.
The construction is scheduled to be completed in three years. The highway will stretch from Galle Face to Malabe in Colombo, specifically from Colombo's fort area into the central business district, which would then connect with an outer circular highway. It will help to ease the traffic congestion in Colombo.
Thiruneelakanda said Sithru and PJI would seek to employ Sri Lankan contractors and consultants for the project, as they would be more knowledgeable about construction details in their country.
Deputy Tourism Minister Datuk Donald Lim and Sri Lankan Minister of Highways and Road Development Jeyaraj Fernandopulle witnessed the MoU signing.



LIST OF TOP 30 SHAREHOLDERS AS AT 16 OCTOBER 2007

Koh Tiew Seng 13,543,830 million shares or 3.34 per cent of the company.
Koh is Donald's wife.

PJI gains RM350K from units' sale to MD

KUALA LUMPUR: PJI HOLDINGS BHD [] is set to gain RM350,000 from selling two units of serviced apartments in Olives Residences, Subang Jaya to its managing director Datuk Lim Siang Chai for RM1.28 million.


In a Bursa Malaysia filing today, PJI said the apartments were bought by its subsidiary PJ Indah Sdn Bhd (PJISB) in 2008 for a total of RM865,170.


"The board at its meeting held on Feb 25, 2010 has approved the disposal," it said, adding the audit committee had determined the disposal was fair, reasonable and was not detrimental to the interests of the minority shareholders of the company.


Lim, better known as Donald Lim, abstained from all deliberations and voting on the resolution.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Is the MCA relevant?
















MCA vice-president Donald Lim Siang Chai has proposed that a Chinese version of Perkasa be organized to counter the Malay right-wing group’s alleged racial assaults against the Chinese.

Lim has even indicated that the Kuala Lumpur-Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall should play such a street-fighting role.

In response, Perkasa leader Ibrahim Ali has labelled Lim “a dangerous man” for allegedly promoting racial tension.

It is simply hilarious to see the two attacking each other as being racists! The blithe of the pot calling the kettle black is surely entertaining.

Lim has argued that it is not proper for the MCA to take the role of challenging Perkasa as it is a political party and such a function is best left to an NGO to deal with. What illogical nonsense is this?

With such people in the top leadership of the MCA, it is almost certain that the days of the party are numbered.

The so-called reform and revamp of the MCA to redeem its role as the representative of the Chinese community in the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition are obviously not happening.

MCA_DonaldLim









Weird and bizarre idea

Any party with a morally soiled leader at the top, accompanied by other foolish leaders with weird and bizarre ideas like the proposal to set up a Perkasa-type Chinese group, and the endorsement of legalized gambling, has lost its reverence and relevance in the nation-building process of our country.

If a party purportedly representing the Chinese community survives only on the support and goodwill of the non-Chinese vote, then it has become insignificant, inefficacious, and ineffectual to the community, in fact, irrelevant.

Ibrahim Ali has the impudence to warn Lim that the MCA can forget about enjoying the Malay votes if it continues its current leadership style. Such an impertinence and effrontery to the party are surely the result of its own combination of brazenness, arrogance and stupidity.

Donald Lim’s blunt reaction to Ibrahim Ali and Perkasa is typical of the unthinking obtuse knee-jerk response that puts the party in a fatuous and witless position in the eyes of the people, especially the educated middle-class people in the urban areas. It is the inbecile party cretins that put the MCA in such an embarrassing position.

The MCA cannot claim credit for the liberalization of several previously ethnic-centric policies, such as the blanket awarding of scholarships to all students who had obtained nine or more As in the SPM examination.

Anyone with a bit of wisdom and intelligence will know that such a concession is basically caused by the success of the opposition parties, especially the DAP, which have gain substantial support from the urban, mostly Chinese, voters.

An appendage to Umno

It is not that the MCA fought and won these concessions for the Chinese, but simply because of the increasing fear of the Barisan Nasional leadership that without making such a compromise, the opposition Pakatan Rakyat’s target of taking over control of Putrajaya after the next general election will be a reality.

Currently, the MCA is merely an appendage to Umno, and its survival, as Ibrahim Ali pointed out, is dependent upon the support of the Malay voters. The party claims to have a million plus members. If this is so, than even its own members had voted against it at the previous general elections. Some in-depth studies on the number of votes the MCA obtained from the Chinese-majority constituencies will confirm this.

Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak is apparently worried that the MCA would not be able to deliver the Chinese votes to the Barisan Nasional at the next general election, a very important one for him personally as he needs a massive electoral mandate to consolidate his power base in his own party and in the Barisan Nasional coalition.

Hence, Najib is making more frequent visits to the ground, particularly the urban non-Malay areas, and announcing various acceptable and agreeable people-centric policies, programmes and projects to neutralize the possible issues the opposition may raise at the next general election.

The withdrawal of the sport-gambling licence, the blanket approval of scholarships, the compromise on the permits for controlled items, the hold on the goods and service tax (GST), the granting of financial aid to vernacular schools and religious institutions, to name the major ones, are geared towards appeasing the people, a positive attempt at winning their hearts and minds.

Nepotism and cronyism

Can the MCA honestly say that it is its efforts that such concessions are won for the people? No one outside of the MCA leadership believe that the party has the capability, and the credibility, to fight or bargain for such concessions for the people.

It is obviously the fear of a powerful alternative coalition that can possibly oust the ruling Barisan Nasional, especially Umno, from power that the Barisan Nasional has no choice but to placate the people.

The MCA, if it continues with its current style of leadership, practising nepotism and cronyism, is a liability to the Barisan Nasional and will cause more erosion of the Chinese support.

Moreover, the quality of the party leadership is certainly questionable, with dubious sort of persons talking nonsense and making a fool of themselves and the party.

The precarious situation the MCA is in now is certainly pitiable, given the fact that it was once a great and powerful representative of the Chinese community in the government with leaders such as Tun Tan Cheng Lok, Tun H.S. Lee and Tun Omar Ong Yoke Lin, leaders who have sparkling credentials, absolutely impeccable moral, and irreproachable reputation.

Is the MCA relevant today? — MySinChew.com

This blog condemns all sorts of racism be it Malay Extremism or Chinese Extremism , Religious Bigots or Fanatics so Donald get lost we have no place for you in MCA !

Monday, July 12, 2010

MCA in damage control mode over ‘Chinese Perkasa’

Please Resign , You are not fit to be a Deputy Minister and a MCA Vice President .

Why is the MCA President quiet about this issue ? Not a single word from him ? He's the one who nominated him for a Senator's post and a Dep Ministers post .


UPDATED @ 03:18:38 PM 12-07-2010
July 12, 2010
Lim’s reported call for a Chinese Perkasa has seen MCA leaders moving sideways. — file pic

KUALA LUMPUR, July 12 — MCA leaders today distanced themselves from their vice-president Datuk Donald Lim’s suggestion for a Chinese Perkasa, saying that the party does not practise retaliatory politics.

MCA deputy president Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said that Lim’s views, which were reported on Saturday, were not the official stand of the party.

“We have one golden rule — ‘do unto others as you would have others do unto you’. So do not do unto others as you do not want Perkasa to do unto you.

“So the stand is simple: This is not the party’s stand. The party has voiced out its stand that we sometimes do not agree with what Perkasa does or says, so why should we set up another body to counter them?

Liow said Lim’s reported call was not MCA’s stand. — file pic
“Whatever action, there will be a reaction,” the health minister told reporters in Parliament today.

When asked if he felt Lim’s statement was irresponsible, Liow hesitated before pointing out that the vice-president’s stand was his personal view.

“It is not the party’s stand,” he reiterated.

MCA Youth chief Datuk Wee Ka Siong said the party never practised “tit-for-tat” politics and was of the opinion that forming a Chinese Perkasa to counter the original Perkasa would not solve any issues.

“We have never discussed the formation of the Chinese Perkasa. I do not believe in this and we do not subscribe to tit-for-tat politics. We will voice out the grievances of the community regardless of race, and even though the MCA is a communal-based party, we will still fight for all Malaysians.

“We do not need to outsource to any other NGOs and I am not aware that the party leadership had ever discussed setting up this ‘Chinese Perkasa’. It is a non-issue,” he said.

Wee, who was himself recently at loggerheads with Perkasa’s fiery president Datuk Ibrahim Ali, said that Lim could have been misquoted.

“I was informed by a friend of Lim’s that his words had been spun out of context,” he said.

He noted that Lim’s “close friend” had informed him yesterday of this, noting that Lim had only meant to say that the NGOs (like Perkasa) should battle out their struggles with other NGOs.

“You should check with Lim on this. I can only confirm that the party has never discussed this. Any such statement should come from the central committee or the presidential council.

Wee defended his colleague by saying Lim may have been misquoted. — file pic
“It is true that our leaders have a right to their own views, but we are talking about a party stand here on certain issues,” he said.

Lim had reportedly called for the formation of a Chinese Perkasa for the purpose of rebutting the often racially-sensitive statements made by the Malay rights non-governmental organisation.

He had said that it was not suitable for MCA, as a political party, to fight head-on with Perkasa as political parties and NGOs function at different levels.

When asked to comment further on Ibrahim’s statement that organisations like Dong Jiao Zhong were similar to Perkasa in their struggles, Liow was quick to refute this but admitted that this could be easily misconstrued as such.

“For us in the Chinese community, we look at Dong Jiao Zhong as educationists. As those who strive for better quality education... we do not look at them as extremist. But from another community, their views may differ,” he said.

Liow called on the organisation to effectively communicate their concerns to the Malay community in order to help them better understand their objectives.

“We need to create these kinds of bridges to promote this type of understanding. Rather than just be suspicious of one body, then create another body to counter that body. It is a vicious cycle and we do not want to see this going on,” he said.

MCA vice-president Datuk Chor Chee Heung told reporters that Perkasa was just a small body.

“Only one or two of their leaders act like they are crazy for publicity. We do not need to help them boost their popularity like this,” he said.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Donald Lim calls for Chinese Perkasa

This Donald Duck is a pain in the ass . Who the hell does he thinks he is ? I always have a opinion that this short ass has an inferiority complex and is doing more damage to MCA then the others . A stooge of the pornstar . Have him contest a seat in Kamunting or Simpang Renggam . Maybe that's where his supporters are .

The 1Malaysia concept appears to be tearing apart with one BN component party leader suggesting a Chinese version of Perkasa to counter the right-wing Malay group's constant racial assaults. MCA vice-president Donald Lim Siang Chai, who suggested the idea, also gave a strong hint that the proper body to take the role would be the vocal Kuala Lumpur Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall (KLSCAH). The MCA was not suited to take on such a responsibility as political parties and NGOs operate at different levels, he pointed out. NONE"The Chinese community and Chinese associations such as the KLSCAH can play such a role. MCA can only respond up to a certain level - it should be NGOs versus their counterparts," he said. According to Lim (left), the Chinese community need not worry about Perkasa as they can organise a similar organisation of their own. He rejected the notion that organising a pressure group to counter another will be akin to fighting fire with fire.

Certain issues are better brought out in the open through debate, he said. Lim also expressed his confidence in the government's ability to handle Perkasa's aggressive demands. However, he conceded that the government does have to take note of Perkasa's demands as "the country is a multiracial country and under the fair and balanced principle, we must consider demands from all." He denied that the second part of the New Economic Model (NEM) which deals with the highly controversial issue of 30 percent bumiputera equity has been shelved under pressure from Perkasa's antics as claimed by the opposition.

He said the details are expected to be released by September or together with the budget when it is presented on Oct 15. Lim was speaking to reporters during an interview with the Chinese press at his deputy finance minister's office in Putrajaya yesterday.

BN Chinese support only 30% He also predicted that the general election will be held in a year's time.

Since Lim is also the Selangor state chief, he faces an uphill task in regaining Chinese support, who heavily favoured Pakatan in the March 8, 2008 general election. Lim pointed out the Chinese support for the BN is around 30 to 35 percent nationwide, dipping to 20 or 25 percent in the Klang Valley. kuala terengganu by election voting day 170109 voters queue"Our target is 50 percent support from Chinese voters. If we can get 40 percent, we should be happy. I am very practical: if I said we can raise the support to 80 percent, then it would be a lie." However, Lim said the immediate task is to help BN regain Selangor, which Pakatan seized in the last polls. The state MCA was almost annihilated in the last general election, winning only one out of the seven parliamentary seats and two out of the 14 state constituencies contested.

However, Lim said the party had analysed the multiple factors that led to the defeat, such as parachute candidates, and will start preparing to identify suitable candidates as early as possible to reduce party in-fighting. Nevertheless, Lim was not perturbed at being disposed by PKR greenhorn Hee Loy Hian in Petaling Jaya Selatan, a parliamentary seat which he had held for three terms. "Every party, no matter ruling party or opposition, has its strongholds. In highly educated areas such as Petaling Jaya, the electorate tends to tilt towards the opposition.

"If we lost in the opposition strongholds, there is no need to feel ashamed. Only if we lost in our stronghold will we have to close shop." He said the voting pattern in other countries show that metropolitan areas favour the opposition as intellectuals tend to vote for checks and balance. If Pakatan took over Putrajaya, then he is confident he would win under the opposition ticket. "Things will be different if we reach developed status as voters will start favouring candidates, rather than parties." Replacing Tee Keat at Pandan? He remained tight-lipped on the seats he had in mind to contest in the coming elections, but he is open to any suggestion.

NONEThis included former party president Ong Tee Keat's (left) Pandan seat, the sole constituency won by the MCA in Selangor in 2008. Lim said as state chief, he can go for any seat. "Everything is possible; some even suggested Penang since I hail from there. Most important is personal capability, I haven't had any inspiration as yet (whether to contest in Petaling Jaya Selatan). When I've decided, I will inform you," he told journalists. NONELim (right) also said he does not mind people labelling him a backdoor deputy minister for gaining his post through a senatorship.

"Every party has its own way of handling issues. The Barisan Nasional mechanism chose this way. Nothing wrong with it.

"Some even taunted me as ikan masin (salted fish) coming back alive (a Chinese proverb for resurrecting the dead). This is nothing. The most important thing is to help people when holding positions."

Earlier in the year, Lim's senatorship had come under fire earlier for having been procured not through the voter's mandate, but through the back door.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Donald Duck , I think MCA is not the place for you . Better go back to Disneyland and have free elections there among the cartoons .

Tee Keat brushes aside "tussle ending soon" rumours

Kong See Hoh


PETALING JAYA (Jan 24, 2010): MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat says he is not aware that infighting in the party will end before the Chinese New Year, Nanyang Siang Pau reported today.

Asked to comment on a report that former vice-president Datuk Donald Lim Siang Chai was quoted by blogger Lim Fang as saying the party infighting would be resolved before the lunar new year, Ong said the question should be directed at the source.

“Ask the people concerned, ask Lim Siang Chai, we don’t know,” he said.

Ong said nowadays it was hard to differentiate between truth and falsehood and the question of whether party infighting would be resolved before the Chinese New Year should be directed at those who claimed to be in the know.

Asked what expectations he has for the party elections now being sought by a faction in the party, he said his expectations are not important.

“What I aspire to do now is to serve the rakyat, which is what matters most.”

According a report in China Press yesterday, Lim Fang wrote in his blog that Siang Chai had told a group of bloggers at a gathering recently that a solution would be found to the MCA leadership tussle before the Chinese New Year, and ultimately, fresh elections would be held.

Lim Fang also said Siang Chai had obtained information from an influential source that MCA should reshuffle its leadership to be able to face the public.

Otherwise, not only would MCA be stuck in a quagmire, the operations of the Barisan Nasional would also be affected.

The blogger also said Siang Chai believed deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek would fulfil his promise to pave the way for fresh polls.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Chor publicly declares support for Tee Keat

Here are a few articles in case you missed out .

Chor publicly declares support for Tee Keat

by Kong See Hoh

Datuk Donald Lim

Datuk Chor Chee Heung

KUALA LUMPUR (Sept 27, 2009) :
MCA central committee (CC) member Datuk Chor Chee Heung ysterday publicly declared his support for Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat and urged central delegates to rally behind the party president, the Chinese press reported today.

"I believe that central delegates should support the present leadership. Follow me in supporting the present party leadership," Chor, who is deputy finance minister, was quoted as saying in a public function in Petaling Jaya.

"We want continued stability for MCA. If the party has too many leaders with too many leadership styles, it would only create more internal problems."

Meanwhile, Petaling Jaya Selatan MCA chief Datuk Donald Lim Siang Chai declined to be drawn into making a stand in the current leadership tussle. Smart guy , with Chua playing him out in the last party election by prematurely announcing he is contesting for a VP without his consent when in actual fact he wanted to go for the DP position . Chua in fact went round the country during his lunch and dinner talks telling everyone that he Donald is an idiot and a fool . Yes indeed , if he Donald were to support him now .

However, he said the 25 central delegates from his division would make a wise choice on the Oct 10 extraordinary general meeting EGM).

Pressed by the media, Lim who was involved in a three-cornered fight with sacked party deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek and former secretary-general Datuk Seri Ong Ka Chuan for the party No. 2 post last year, said: "I will make a choice when the day comes. It (my vote) surely will not be a spoilt vote".

He disclosed that both Tee keat's and Chua's camps had lobbied for his and his division's support.

Both camps have their support but what is important is that they must think of how to pick up the pieces and close ranks.

With the EGM about two weeks away, bookies are said to have started accepting bets on its outcome.


Tee Keat is gaining in delegates' support
by Giam Say Khoon

Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek

Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat

PETALING JAYA (Sept 27, 2009) :
MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat is gaining more support for the extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on Oct 10 -- if the results of two online polls conducted by a vernacular newspaper are anything to go by.

About 61% of the respondents in a survey conducted by the Kwong Wah Yit Poh's website www.kwongwah.com.my
feel that it is not suitable for a morally-tainted leader to lead a party or a nation.

The rest feel it is fine for a tainted leader to hold the top post in a party or lead a nation. ????????? Possibly the numbers made up of the Has Beens supporters of the Rotten Fish Head and the dick lovers from some of the women who can't stand to see their beloved pornstar king being out of action . They'll miss his elongated dick . That's the problem with some women who let their hearts rule their heads .

The poll does not name any particular political leader but it comes less than two weeks before the EGM to resolve the differences between Ong and suspended deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek, who was expelled, but later suspended for four years, for tarnishing the image of the party through his involvement a sex DVD scandal.

In an earlier poll, also carried out on the newspaper's website, 69% of the 611 participants felt that Ong should continue to lead the party. Only 31% threw their support behind Chua.

The EGM will vote on the five resolutions proposed by Chua's camp:
> Move a motion of no-confidence against Ong; Vote NO

> Annul the decision of the presidential council to accept the recommendation by the disciplinary board to expel Chua; Vote NO

> Reinstate Chua as the deputy president; Vote NO

> Revoke any appointments made before the EGM including the appointment of deputy president; and

> Dismiss all possible discplinary actions and sentences against the requisitionists.

Political analysts see the EGM as a "win-all" or "lose-all" battle for the two leaders.

If Ong loses the battle and resigns, it could trigger fresh party elections because Chua, who would be reinstated as the deputy president, will automatically become the president until the next party elections as stipulated under the party constitution.

A disciplinary board member told Kwong Wah Yit Poh on Saturday at least 400 of those who signed for the requisition of the EGM felt they were "conned" because they were not aware that a motion of no-confidence against the party president would be included among the resolutions.

The board member feels these "conned" delegates would turn around and support Ong.

Another party insider told the paper Chua's supporters may be losing their momentum because the Oct 10 date for the EGM "has provided the incumbents sufficient time to counter the strategies used by Chua".

"The situation is not too positive for Chua. He must use whatever time left to explain to the delegates and hope that the delegates will not be swayed when making their decision during the EGM," he said.
Chua's supporters had argued, however, it was a tactic by Ong to weaken the morale and confidence of the requisitionists.

Pro-Chua EGM action committee chief coordinator Datuk Seri Tan Chai Ho also said the delegates signed in front of lawyers and commissioners of oath and that they had full access to the resolutions before signing the requisition form.