Sunday, October 7, 2012

News Article (5W1H)

Parents want milk for babies to be made a price controlled item

October 6, 2012

 

KUALA LUMPUR: Parents are urging the government to consider making baby formula a controlled item in order to curb recent price hikes.

They are concerned that the manufacturers' increase in prices would cause lower income parents to choose the cheapest and lowest quality milk in the market which would jeopardise their babies' growth.

A mother of two, housewife Azila Awaludin, 35, expressed her concern over the volatile prices of the products lately.

"My husband doesn't earn much and I'm forced to choose the cheapest milk for my baby," she told Bernama.

Father of one, Al-Hafiz Jaamat Wok, 27, felt the government needed to play a bigger role in controlling the hike in baby formula prices.

"The government should subsidise baby milk and not take this issue lightly as many parents are not able to cope with the extra expenses now," he said.

Wan Norasikin Abdul Cader, 42, who is a babysitter, said she had to spend an extra RM200 monthly just on baby formula alone.

"Supermarkets usually offer promotions on other items but never for baby formula," she added.

Meanwhile, a Jalan Kasipillay mini market owner, K. Sathiah, 43, explained that people were buying less baby formula since prices started going up recently.

"Most people have to choose the cheapest milk and we have to sell it lower than the suppliers' set prices. I hope the government can do something to control the situation," he said.

A media report on Friday said that some baby formula manufacturers had increased prices up to RM15 per kg in the past two weeks and others would follow suit soon.

It also quoted Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob as saying the government did not control the prices of baby formula. - Bernama

Source :
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/10/6/nation/20121006163308&sec=nation



Who : Parents
What :Urge government to consider making baby formula as price controlled item
When : (No)
Where : (No)
Why : To curb recent price hikes.
How : (No)

Elements of the Newsworthy  : Consequences


News Article (5W1H)

1,681 private college nurses to serve in govt hospitals

October 6, 2012 

 

KUALA LUMPUR: A total of 1,681 nurses from private nursing colleges will be recruited at the end of the year to serve in government hospitals, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai.

He said prior to this the government only hired one per cent of nurses from private colleges for every 3,000 accepted.

He said recruitment had increased to meet the rising demand for nurses from government hospitals and high number of applications from private colleges.

Liow said that according to Human Resources Ministry records, the number of applications went up to 5,000 from 2,500 last year.

"Each year we will recruit this number until 2015 when we will have 6,726 nurses from private colleges," he told reporters after opening an international conference on Disaster Nursing in conjunction with the 17th Malaysia-Singapore Nursing Conference on Saturday.

He said to ensure the nurses met requirements, they had to sit for and pass the Malaysian Nurses Board examination.

To date, the ministry has 66,000 nurses working in government hospitals nationwide.

Liow said 473 nurses had been trained in disaster nursing preparedness while another 438 nurses were trained in emergency and trauma nursing programmes last year.

He said these training programmes had also been extended to private institutions.

"Emergency physicians in the main hospitals throughout Malaysia have started to develop nurse training programmes in the area of disaster preparedness, formulation of disaster plans for hospitals and organising disaster drills to ensure proper patient care and management in disaster settings," he said.

Liow said nurses had to be prepared to deal with all hazards as they played a major role in responding to such events. - Bernama

Source :
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/10/6/nation/20121006144053&sec=nation



Who : 1,681 nurses from private nursing colleges
What : recruited  to serve
When : at the end of the year
Where : in government hospitals
Why : (No)
How : (No)

Elements of the Newsworthy  : Consequences
 


 

 

News Article (5W1H)

Johor, Penang gazetted as ‘No Smoking’ zones

October 5, 2012 

 

KUALA LUMPUR: Six areas in Penang and one in Johor have been gazetted as 'No Smoking' zones under the Control of Tobacco Product Regulations 2004.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said in a statement Friday that the gazette was effective Oct 2 and implemented with the cooperation of both state governments.

He said in Penang, the gazetted zones were the George Town Municipal Park, Botanic Gardens, Air Itam Dam, Teluk Bahang Dam (all on the island), Mengkuang Dam in Bukit Mertajam and Ampang Jajar Urban Park in Seberang Perai Tengah.

In Johor, the gazetted 'No Smoking' zone is the Mutiara Rini Urban Forest, Johor Baru.

Liow said in June last year, the Malacca government gazetted five zones, namely Malacca World Heritage City, Malacca Raya, Malacca International Trade Centre, Alor Gajah town centre and Jasin town centre under the Malacca Free of Cigarette Smoke programme.

"The ministry with the cooperation of state governments is determined to create more 'No Smoking' zones, especially in public places.

"This is to protect the non-smokers, especially women and children, from the effects of secondhand tobacco smoke," Liow said in the statement.

He said the Malaysia Global Adult Tobacco Survey conducted last year found that 70 percent of adults were exposed to secondhand tobacco smoke in public places.

The Control of Tobacco Product Regulations 2004 prohibits smoking in 21 categories of places including hospital or clinic areas, lifts and public toilets, public transport vehicles, public transport stations/stops, government premises, higher learning institutions, childcare centres/kindergartens, shopping complexes, fuel stations and libraries. - Bernama

Source :
 http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/10/5/nation/20121005204019&sec=nation

 

Who : (No)
What : Gazetted as 'No Smoking' zones
When : (No)
Where : Six area in Penang and one in Johor
Why : (No)
How : Under the Control of Tobacco Product Regulations 2004

Elements of the Newsworthy  : Consequences
 

 

News Article (5W1H)

Left turn allowed at six major junctions in KL even if traffic lights are red

October 4, 2012

KUALA LUMPUR: Effective today, vehicles passing through six traffic light junctions in Kuala Lumpur can turn left even if the traffic light is red, provided no vehicles or pedestrian are passing by.

Kuala Lumpur mayor Datuk Ahmad Phesal Talib said the six junctions involved are Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman, Jalan Parlimen, Jalan Raja Abdullah, Jalan Ampang, Jalan Tun Razak and Jalan Raja Muda Musa Abdul Aziz.

The move is to reduce traffic congestion and City Hall had put up sign boards in the areas to inform the public, he told reporters after launching the implementation of the rule known as 'Authorised Left Turn'.

He said, the move was implemented based on the guideline and specification stipulated by the Malaysian Institute of Road Safety Research (Miros) to ensure the security of road users, especially pedestrians, was not compromised.

He said City Hall would implement the move in stages at several new locations after carrying out a feasibility study.

Currently, three locations had implemented the move, namely, in Putrajaya, Kuching, Sarawak and Kuantan in Pahang. - Bernama

Source :
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/10/4/nation/20121004214542&sec=nation



Who : Driver
What :Left turn allowed at six major junctions even if traffic lights are red
When : Starts from October 4, 2012
Where : Kuala Lumpur
Why : (No)
How : (No)

Elements of the Newsworthy  : Timeliness

Saturday, October 6, 2012

News Article (5W1H)

PM: Budget 2013 is people-friendly, fiscally responsible

October 2, 2012 

 

KUALA LUMPUR: Continued growth, low unemployment and a healthy banking sector are key strengths of Malaysia's economy that allowed the Government to present a people-friendly, fiscally-responsible budget.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak noted how Malaysia's growth is expected to remain strong at between 4.5 to 5 percent this year, with less than 3 percent unemployment and a banking system that continued to be "in good shape".

“This strength is what allowed the Government to deliver a budget last week that was responsive to people's needs but also fiscally responsible.

“I am glad treading the comments from analysts who found that indeed it was a people-friendly budget but fiscally responsible,” Najib said in his closing address at the Khazanah Megatrends Forum 2012.

The two-day event was attended by over 600 local and foreign delegates comprising leaders who discussed the global economic shifts.

Najib said that while the Government had made a commitment to cut the country's deficit from 4.5 percent to 4 per cent in 2014, Budget 2013 was also a “budget for the future” of the country.

“It looks to address some of the questions that this conference has posed how Asian economies can remain competitive, secure more investment, and capitalise on their comparative advantages,” he said.

Najib said Malaysia's experience in dealing with the 1997 Asian economic downturn and the aftermath of the 2008 credit crisis in the United States gave the Government valuable experience in preparing for any future crisis.

“The risks still remain. But thankfully, the Government's successful management of the economy meant that Malaysia was fortunate to emerge from the credit crisis in a position of relative strength,” said Najib.

Najib later launched a book produced by Khazanah on the mangroves of Johor titled “Sandpipers and Mudskippers A Journey Through the Ramsar Mangroves of Iskandar Malaysia.”

He also launched the “Friends of Iskandar Ramsar”, an initiative by Khazanah to organise conservation awareness programmes at the three mangroves in Johor protected under the inter-governmental Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.

The three mangroves - Tanjung Piai, Kukup Island and Sungai Pulai are all located in Iskandar Malaysia.

Source :
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/10/2/nation/20121002194114&sec=nation

 

Who : Government
What : Budget 2013
When : (No)
Where : (No)
Why : (No)
How : (No)

Elements of the Newsworthy  :  Proximity