Laman Webantu   KM2A1: 2584 File Size: 6.7 Kb *



Jenayah di Malaysia meningkat
By web aNtu

19/8/2000 7:54 am Sat


Sumber: muslimmedia (1996)

Komen:

Artikel muslimedia - walaupun sudah lama, menarik perhatian saya, kerana kerajaan tahu rakyat malaysia kurang membaca. Kalau minat pun bahan2 khayalan dan bahan2 yg mendedah urat dan paha. Kebanyakan bahan2 cetak terlalu bermotifkan keuntungan - kesan jangka panjang dan keruntuhan nilai manusia belakang kira. Majalah dibeli bukan kerana isinya tetapi kerana gambar2 berahi dan kelucahan didlmnya. Kini makalah2 sebegini sudah boleh didapati di kedai2 runcit pula - ini amat merbahaya!!

Sitambah pula kos untuk memiliki maksiat2 hari ini amat murah apa akan jadi kepada anak2 muda dan murid2 sekolah? Dengan RM3.00 mereka boleh beli buku2 yg teruk atau melayar laman web mencari adegan lucah. Semuanya mengundang seribu masalah....

Proses mencelikkan rakyat laksana melepaskan batuk di tangga. Sebagai contoh lihatlah Perpustakaan Negara - tak bermaya macam orang sakit jantung kat sebelah. Nak jadi member kena isi borang berjela, siap dengan gambor - kalau kat negeri org putih - perlu bawa bil letrik/talifon aje - terus boleh pinjam buku serta merta.

Polis buat apa?

Polis menangkap lah - tapi tangkap apa? Tangkap orang ke atau tangkap duit ??

Bila saya baca tulisan sdr Along itu, saya semakin memahami kenapa hidup polis banyak yg berakhir dengan kekorupan. Ramai pegawai polis yang mula berkerja part-time kerana pulangan lebih berbaloi - peluang ini terbuka luas kerana polis2 ini berinteraksi dgn pelbagai jenis manusia - tidak macam tentera. Dan sudah tentu manusia2 yg berinteraksi dengan polis ini kebanyakkannya penjenayah2 atau mangsa penjenayah belaka!!

Satu masa dulu MARA cuba menangani masalah siberhutang dgn memaparkan nama2 di akbar. Strategi ini efektif kerana ramai yg sudah mula nak bayar. Kenapa strategi ini tidak digunakan utk membersihkan imej polis? Kalau setakat membuat kursus2 telatah polis2 kita tak kemana. Polis yg korup sewajarnya diaibkan kerana merekalah sebenarnya punca gejala2 songsang berleluasa. Malangnya hari ini polis semacam dilindungi - kes Rahim Nor menunjukkan kerajaan tidak bersedia menghukum polis walaupun telah sah melakukan kesalahan, tetapi kerajaan lebih bersedia untuk memukul "penunjuk perasaan" walaupun kesalahan mereka masih dlm persoalan.

Artikel muslimedia ini juga menyebut TV merupakan salah satu ruang utk rakyat yg malas membaca ini dididik, tetapi malangnya TV gagal memainkan peranan untuk mendidik. Sebaliknya TV sudah menjadi medan merosakkan pemikiran rakyat supaya org yg menghalang pegawai BPR menjalankan siasatan tetap dianggap wira; wira yg sama yg pantas berlari - bukan di sukan komanwel, tapi wira perintis yg pertama lari dari safina mahkamah!!

Kini jenayah2 sudah menular hingga ke sekolah. Ini adalah akibat dari media cetak dan media elektronik yg gagal memainkan peranan. Tidak guna Mahath1r menangis, kerana mahath1r sendirilah yang melepaskan media2 ini dan pak lah sendirilah yang menghambat dan menutup media2 alternatif seperti detik, ekslusif dsbnya.

Apa yg berlaku kpd JAIS akan menyebabkan orang melayu yg gian ketempat2 maksiat bertambah gian. Tambah gian lagi bila ulama sprt Ust Shamsuri dipenjarakan. Ia berlaku di tanah-air kita, tanah air yg diperintah oleh org yg mengaku negara ini sudah Islam dan memperjuangkan nilai2 Islam ......... sungguh menduka citakan!

--ooOoo--
Juvenile delinquency on the rise in Malaysia

by our own correspondent

Juvenile delinquency, a phrase hitherto a#sociated with America and the rest of the
West, is making its presence felt in Malaysia. "Throughout the nation, a total of 11
cases involving juvenile delinquents were recorded daily in 1993. The following
year, the figure rose to 12 cases daily", a tabloid which is distributed free in the
Klang Valley (Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur and the suburbs) reported.

Extrapolating imaginatively from current figures, the paper said, it is predicted that
by the year 2000, there will be almost 20 cases a day involving juvenile
delinquents or 7,300 cases a year. This is fewer compared to in the US, but analysts
say this is indeed a reason to worry for a small nation like Malaysia.

As expected, the figures in urban areas are exceedingly higher than those in the
rural areas. Most of the offences were crimes relating to property, individuals, sex,
gambling and traffic offences which are incorporated in the country's Juvenile Act
(1947).

The definition of a juvenile is someone who is below 18 years old. Statistics from the
Social Welfare Department reveal that 668 cases were recorded in 1993 in the
country's most industrialized state, Selangor. This figure rose to 986 cases in 1994.
Meanwhile, 698 cases were recorded in the capital Kuala Lumpur in 1993 with a
slight drop to 668 cases in 1994.

The Social and Welfare Department's director of research and planning attributes
this trend to peer group pressure which is the most frequent reason behind juvenile
delinquency. One ray of hope is that the success rate of rehabilitating juvenile
delinquents currently stands at "more than 75 per cent."

Lack of parental control is said to be the main contributing factor. The current
economic boom gives both parents opportunity to work and earn good money
outside, leaving children to mend for themselves or in the care of their maids.

The other negative influence on the children is the TV. Since the Malaysian people,
both educated and half educated, have poor reading habit, television remains their
main pre-occupation. According to a survey carried out not long ago by Dewan
Bahasa dan Pustaka, the Government-owned largest publication house in
Malaysia, an average Malaysian seriously reads less than one page anually. The
survey also found that serious books and novels are the least read materials in
contrast to entertainment, gossip and smut magazines which are widely available.

But the government still wants more TV channels! Malaysia currently has four public
channels. Almost all of them are entertainment- oriented, unlike some public
television channels in the West which concentrate on documentaries, news and
other education-based programmes. The most recent addition is the
subscription-based Mega- TV which offers five round-the-clock channels. With
the recent launch of Malaysia's first satellite Measat, plans are also afoot to feed
Malaysia's hungry audience with 20 more channels.

Is Malaysia having a good time at the expense of its future generation?

Muslimedia - April 1996-August 1996