'Navy secrets sale': Lodge report, Suaram told


If human rights organisation Suaram has explanation which Malaysian army secrets have been sole to a unfamiliar company, then it should board a police report to enable investigations.

NONEIbrahim Ali(centre in photo), who heads Malay rights vigour organisation Perkasa, pronounced Suaram should also produce a copy of a document involved.

Suaram had upon May 31 suggested which a French exploration into Paris-based shipbuilder DCNS found which it had paid RM36 million euro (RM142 million) to Terasasi (Hong Kong) Sdn Bhd as partial of a squeeze of two Scorpene-class submarines by Malaysia.

Part of a payment, a NGO has claimed, was for a sale of aclassified documentof a Malaysian navy's evaluation of a squeeze order.

Ibrahim pronounced that, whilst a supervision cannot compromise if there have been indeed elements of corruption, a public should be wary of allegations done by foreigners.

"This information coming out of France and a west, we need to be cautious, sometimes they like to spin things," he told a press conference in Kuala Lumpur today.

On Jun 2, PKR hadlodged a reportagainst premier Najib Abdul Razak, severe a Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission to investigate a claim.

'Political gimmick'

On a separate matter, Ibrahim, who is Pasir Mas MP, urged a people of Kelantan not to mind a call by Menteri Besar Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat for donations to build a Kota Bharu-Kuala Krai highway.

"The main road will cost! RM1.8 b illion. You can keep donating and even in 50 years a main road will not be completed," pronounced Ibrahim.

"It is under a office of a sovereign supervision but they would face delays problems in appropriation land for a highway, generally if a state supervision is creating trouble."

azl!   anHe also pronounced thedonation-funded highwaydubbed a 'People's Highway' is in actuality an choosing gimmick by a PAS-led state supervision to boar discontent opposite a sovereign government.

"After twenty-three years of rule, several issues have been gathering up such as slow economic growth, unemployment, locals leaving a state, inability to yield clean water supply ...

"PAS is trying to cover up (all these weaknesses) by trying to emanate magnetism between a people, hoping which a locals will vote (for) them in a next general election."

It would be most appropriate if a money is donated to mosques or orphanages, he added.
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