Waythamoorthy claims brother has no right to sack him from Hindraf

BY CLARA CHOOI
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
April 27, 2013

TAIPING, April 27 Hindraf authority P. Waythamoorthy denied final night that he has been sacked from the Indian rights organisation he founded as his brother P. Uthayakumar has no post in the newly-registered pro-tem committee.

The counsel as well as activist, who was seen on the stump for Barisan Nasional (BN) during the Sri Maha Mariamman Ladang Temerloh here, pronounced but any power or position in Hindraf, Uthayakumar had no right to give any one the boot.

He has no contend during all... he only has absolute contend in the Human Rights Party (HRP), Waythamoorthy (picture) told The Malaysian Insider after speaking to the organisation of Bukit Gantang electorate from the Indian village here.

Waythmoorthy pronounced Uthayakumar had changed on after his recover from apprehension under the Internal Security Act (ISA) in 2009 to form the HRP, the non-registered domestic celebration that champions multiracialism as well as human rights.

He pronounced Uthayakumar ran the HRP for over two years, even combining branches in seven states nationwide, before the transformation fizzled out.

Now when there is no await (for HRP), he is saying that he is the de facto leader of Hindraf.

There was never any such leader, Waythamoorthy remarkable of the previously outlawed Hindraf movement.

Uthayakumar pronounced in an SMS yesterday that Hindraf had sacked Waythamoorthy, expected due to the latters recent preference to spin Hindraf pro-BN.

He is scheduled to explain the sacking during the press conference today.

Hindraf was banned following the mammoth entertainment it hold in 2007 to protest opposite BN policies; the rally has been largely credited for the coalitions staggering detriment of vote! s from t he Indian village in Election 2008.

However, progressing this year in the strategically-timed move, the Najib administration department concluded to lift the ban on the organisation in expectation of the May 5 ubiquitous election.

After several failed attempts by Hindraf to seek endorsement of its demands for the village from federal antithesis Pakatan Rakyat (PR), Waythamoorthy took the now-legal organisation pro-BN final week.

Waythamoorthy, who was reportedly formally recognized as Hindrafs authority by the Registrar of Societies (RoS) on Mar 8, signed the memorandum of bargain with the BN supervision to urge the economic position of the Indian community.

But this earned much criticism from Uthayakumar, who alleged that his brother had sold out to the BN supervision by compromising Hindrafs onslaught for the Indians.

Waythamoorthy, however, denied this final night, saying Hindrafs founding onslaught was about the predicament of the bad as well as the underclass.

Yes, you are struggling... but there contingency be the solution. It is not about making Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim the budding minister or Lim Kit Siang the deputy, he said, referring to the PR de facto leader as well as DAP adviser.

He pronounced that BN authority Datuk Seri Najib Razak had been willing to validate Hindrafs demands, that includes measures to urge the economic wellbeing of the Indians, as well as had proven his mettle as an inclusive budding minister when he signed the movements 18-point blueprint.

We believe he will implement the policies, he said.

Waythamoorthy pronounced while Hindraf has not started accepting formal membership applications, the transformation has more than 100,000 supporters national who will now be campaigning for BN until the May 5 polls.

In his debate during the temple here, Waythamoorthy urged the Indians to give their votes to BN as well as to spread the word to their friends as well as family members elsewhere.

The Indian village is the! poignan t minority in 60 of the 222 federal seats. Buntong in Perak is the largest Indian-majority state seat, where they have up 48 per cent of the 22,907-strong electorate, followed by the Chinese during 44 per cent as well as Malays during six per cent.

Indians have up only about 950,000 of the 13.3 million electorate authorised to cast their ballots in the ubiquitous election.


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