After Utusan, CUEPACS joins AirAsia boycott call

May 22, 2013

Azran had criticised a secular tinge of Utusans front page headline, Apa lagi Cina mahu?. File pic KUALA LUMPUR, May twenty-two Umno-owned Utusan Malaysia reported today a polite servants kinship as well as dual alternative groups joining a boycott of AirAsia as well as sister airline AirAsia X, after a latter firms arch senior manager cursed a journal for a racially provocative title targeting a Chinese following a May 5 polls.

The Malay broadsheet cited a Congress of Unions of Employees in a Public as well as Civil Services (Cuepacs) in a front-page report urging all polite workers to avoid a bill airlines as well as to instead fly aboard inhabitant conduit Malaysia Airlines (MAS) as well as a sister company, Firefly, for a upcoming two-week propagandize holidays.

The energy of 1.4 million polite servants can give an stroke upon AirAsia, so I ask all polite servants to infer this generally in a propagandize holidays, Cuepacs boss Datuk Omar Osman was quoted saying, claiming he had received numerous complaints from multiform consumer groups dissatisfied with AirAsias service.

Several alternative groups were also cited giving identical reasons subsidy their call to have AirAsia a airline of last resort, together with a Executive Officers Union (KEPAK) as well as a Malaysian Consumers Potection as well as Welfare Board (LPKPM), a paper reported.

In an apparent attempt to behind up their claims of dissatisfactory service, Utusan also reported upon a front page a male complaining which a airline had refused to fly behind his mothers corpse from Jogjakarta to Kuala Lumpur even yet she had previously purchased a sheet aboard AirAsia notwithstanding a conduit not being licensed to do so.

The call to boycott AirAsia was mooted by Utusans Awang Selamat a nom-de-plume for a papers common paper voice in a column upon Ma! y ninete en in retaliation for critique from AirAsia Xs arch executive, Azran Osman Rani, over a latters Twitter account for what he reportedly saw as a secular instigation in a aftermath of a May 5 polls.

In response, a paper had published every day views from Perkasa leaders, a Muslim Consumers Society of Malaysia as well as pro-Umno activists who slammed Azran, branding him arrogant as well as a Malay who had forgotten his roots.

Perkasas acting boss Datuk Abdul Rahman Bakar who had rallied to a papers defence blasted Azran, observant a latter could not have climbed up to his present in front of but a Malay energy fought for by Utusan Malaysia.


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