By BLACKHAWK
By the time this article is published, the body of 39-year-old Noramfaizul Mohd Nor, Bernama’s late cameraman, who had apparently followed UMNO Putra club’s humanitarian mission to Somalia would have arrived in Malaysia. It is tragic, that apart from the hundreds of lives lost during the Raya period on Malaysian roads due to the balik kampong mayhem, Faizul should meet his death in war torn Mogadishu, Somalia.
Was this just an accident? Could it have been avoided? Did UMNO rush to Somalia to genuinely help Somalians? Or did UMNO throw caution to the wind and rush callously on the eve of Raya to Somalia just for a publicity stunt? If it was for a publicity stunt, then Faizul would have died in vain and this wouldn’t have been the first time when our personnel, both medical and non-medical would have risked not only their lives but more importantly the people around them who may be completely oblivious to the dangers of this sort of missions.
In 2003, Mercy Malaysia similarly put medical personnel at risk. Its two doctors , Dr. Jamilah and Baba Deni were lucky to get away alive although both were shot in Baghdad. Not so lucky were their Syrian driver and the Iraqi medical personnel who were accompanying them. Both lost their lives in the shooting. Malaysians may mean well, but extending aid to war torn and disaster areas carries immense risks and requires specific training. Its not a boy scout outing. Apart from the safety aspect, questions have arose as to how these trips are being financed and who actually audits these ventures.
When the 2004 tsunami flattened Acheh, Malaysians were one of the first to reach Acheh. But they were hopelessly ill-equipped for the task ahead. In direct contrast, Singapore and Australia sent in their army and naval outfits to attend to the distribution of aid. Humanitarian aid carried out by trained forces tend to be more orderly, organized, triaged and focused to help. Malaysians out to help nuclear-disastered Sendai, Japan following this year’s tsunami were not even allowed to leave Subang for Japan by Japanese authorities, as the Japanese politely refused knowing well they could not guarantee the safety of their own people let alone foreign volunteers untrained in handling nuclear fall-outs.
From the images shown on local TV, the UMNO Putra Team appeared to be untrained personnel doing their rounds on unfriendly and sometimes hostile terrain. How would giving adhoc cholera/typhoid vaccinations and holding impromptu outpatient clinics at refugee camps help civilians there in the long-term? And why would you want to do a job you are not trained to handle especially on terrain you are not familiar with and unfriendly at that too. Shouldn’t it have been a job for our army boys. We are in peace time anyway and this would have been a good mission to keep them on their toes. There is no imminent danger of our submarines sinking as they apparently cannot dive, or our air force jets with no engines crashing and there are certainly no communists to look out for who may be waiting to create another Bukit Kepong situation.
A brief look at the Army’s hospitals’ websites indicate that almost all their hospitals have hardly any patients, which will then beg the question. What do our army docs and medics do with so much free time on their hands? Shouldn’t they have gone instead of the UMNO club. Unless of course the help UMNO went to deliver was a sideshow, the main menu being publicity for UMNO or its leaders judging from the daily reporting in the MSM and TV images during prime time. Is this GE 13 election campaigning using the Somalians misery and our journalists lives to brain wash kampong folk out in Jengka and Baling?
UMNO must now be ready to answer some difficult questions. The Mission arrived in Somalia on 30th August at one of the world’ most dangerous destinations and to a country that is home to pirates that can put to shame even the mightiest of navies in the Indian Ocean, including the US Navy. Apparently it was timed to provide Hari Raya aid and according to a statement issued by its chief, Datuk Abdul Azeez Abdul Rahim to even have Hari Raya prayers there! If the Health Ministry was involved and had sent some of their personnel, Liow Tiong Lai better have some answers ready? With our own Malaysians getting literally war conditions treatment in many of our government hospitals, it would be interesting to listen to Liow’s excuses, in his own Tung Shin way.
Aid was supposed to be distributed to five areas, with Mogadishu being the first stop. Others included Badbadur, about 25km from Mogadishu, where about 250,000 people are taking refuge, Al Shabeb in Merka where 300,000 people are affected by the famine and in the Balet Veni camps which house 100,000 people. Both areas are located 100km from Mogadishu. Even the Operations chief Lt-Col Zahani Zainal Abdin had warned saying it would be risky to even fly into Mogadishu at night. In total there were a total of 55 volunteers and members of the media who formed part of the mission to cover a radius of almost 200 km in a country where there was no law except for a 9000 strong UN backed force – the only law in a country of 10 million.
Make no mistake, in this country even 12 year olds carry AK-47s. UMNO club members had no business being in this country and in their pursuit of cheap publicity endangering the lives of other civilians both Malaysians and Somalians. Any mission that carries with it civilians and journalists are a handicap to any military personnel exposing even the most well-trained military commando to being nothing more then a sitting duck. Al- Fatihah to Noramfaizul Mohd Nor’s family. Let’s hope Bernama and Utusan don’t spin his untimely and unnecessary death into a “mati syahid” affair.
#1 by negarawan on Saturday, 3 September 2011 - 9:01 pm
Abdul Azeez and UMNO have to take full responsibility for putting the lives of the “mission” members under unnecessary risks in a completely lawless and anarchic country like Somalia. This time, the UMNO publicity stunt has sadly taken its toll on an innocent reporter’s life. From the Mat Rempit expedition to the North Pole to this latest debacle, UMNO has spent millions on so-called “humanitarian programs”, the bulk of the expenditure on the traveling and living cost of its own personnel. The impact of their so-called missions is very questionable, as they are poorly planned. It is quit obvious that UMNO has spent a lot of money to bring in a large group of members from the media to cover and publicize their “mission”. Why the need for such a large group of reporters? Many other international charitable organizations work under zero media coverage because they are there to do real work and not for cheap publicity stunts. Shame on you Abdul Azeez and UMNO!
#2 by cemerlang on Saturday, 3 September 2011 - 9:10 pm
oooooh ! Heroes to the rescue !
#3 by limkamput on Saturday, 3 September 2011 - 9:26 pm
There are thousands of trouble spots all over the world, but somehow for some bigot reasons we must have this fatal attraction for Palestine and Somalia. It is about our ego; it is about us wanting to punch above our weight. We are not a superpower; we have no interest in Somalia or Palestine and we have no experience or capability in dealing with situation like that. But somehow we must poke our nose in. We must show to the world we are a great country. Please don’t kid ourselves; we are not even a humanitarian country. If we are, we could have done much more right here and right now.
#4 by yhsiew on Saturday, 3 September 2011 - 9:36 pm
///Unless of course the help UMNO went to deliver was a sideshow, the main menu being publicity for UMNO or its leaders judging from the daily reporting in the MSM and TV images during prime time.///
If people could pay for a TV interview to polish their international image, there should not be any surprise that they would do anything to prop up their fame and popularity for the sake of winning a general election.
#5 by tak tahan on Saturday, 3 September 2011 - 10:20 pm
Aiyah..why jihadist i-bra-him and gang no go and tolong 1 when the time we need them the most?Keris-mudin no order them meh?Sial betul lah.Always appear in war and resque mission in wrong timing..typical Umno warlords
#6 by sheriff singh on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 12:35 am
“Any mission that carries with it civilians and journalists are a handicap to any military personnel…..nothing more then a sitting duck….”
You said it man.
UMNO and especially UMNO Youth are quick to go for cheap publicity stunts. Their efforts are badly planned and executed with no real long term benefits. Just a lot of cheap publicity for the 8pm news and for the pro-UMNO media to crow about.
They do not consider the risks that they are exposing to the people they send to ‘help’. Such ill-conceived missions are bound to have repercussions in this case a death and another injury.
Our PM called the unfortunate victims ‘heroes’ and he will be at the airport to receive the remains. Let us hope he has the decency to call for an inquiry as to this unfortunate UMNO humanitarian mission. Or will he and the missus use the occasion for another publicity stunt? Let us wait and see.
#7 by tak tahan on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 1:03 am
God help Malaysian!!
#8 by Bigjoe on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 11:11 am
The domestic critics of these thing is that its cheap publicity stunt. The truth is actually more complicated but the critics are NOT wrong about a lot of the substance of it. You can even say its symptomatic of UMNO rule be it NEP, Islamization, Ketuanan Melayu – much of the critics are right but blunted by the complication that not all of it is what the say it its. NEP is largely an excuse for corruption and holding on to power, but it does help with some uplifting of Malays. Islamization is an excuse for political power but Muslim do believe in dependency of Islamic in state governance, Ketuanan Melayu is a pipe dream prone to perversion but to the Malays, they believe its a just dream.
So such adventurism are largely publicity stunt but it still matters to people, people who vote.
#9 by boh-liao on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 11:28 am
Woah, FLOM n hubby did not go 2 Somalia 2 face bullets but ran off 2 Perth 4 fun hols
Very smart 1
#10 by k1980 on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 11:57 am
There is a saying in somalia–” A man with a gun never goes hungry, while others without guns starve”
I suggest umno tries sending its publicity stunt teams to somalia using Blackhawks with stealth technology so that they can avoid be tracked on radar and be shot down by the mat somalis.
#11 by dagen on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 12:51 pm
I think this author could hv punctured another hole in our fast depleting well of wealth.
Good idea, umno would jump. Now Jib would you pls allocate 10billion ringgit to train these people for the task?
#12 by boh-liao on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 1:26 pm
UmnoB shld hv sent KJ on aid missions mah, with his red underwear worn outside, cos he had undergone military training what
#13 by seah_thomas on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 1:55 pm
One of the most dangerous place on earth would probably be the war torn nation of Somalia, and in particular, Mogadishu.
Faizul could probably be a ‘Scapegoat’ of a cheap publicity stunt at a very high cost.
lts very unfortunate that this ‘gamble’ by the BN cost much more than Public money.
A life gone cannot be recovered, unlike the public funds
Lets evercise more wisdom and sensitivity with our approach to any political Gambit
Making Faizul a ‘hero’ is just a cheap way of sweeping the dust under the carpet
What happen to accountability?
#14 by monsterball on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 3:15 pm
Najib dare not walk freely in Malaysia…as he said in Rajang Park…Sibu..yet out citizen is sent to a war zone area that we cannot do anything to help at all.
What kind of a Commander is that?
#15 by Loh on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 4:47 pm
///From the images shown on local TV, the UMNO Putra Team appeared to be untrained personnel doing their rounds on unfriendly and sometimes hostile terrain. How would giving adhoc cholera/typhoid vaccinations and holding impromptu outpatient clinics at refugee camps help civilians there in the long-term? And why would you want to do a job you are not trained to handle especially on terrain you are not familiar with and unfriendly at that too. Shouldn’t it have been a job for our army boys. We are in peace time anyway and this would have been a good mission to keep them on their toes. There is no imminent danger of our submarines sinking as they apparently cannot dive, or our air force jets with no engines crashing and there are certainly no communists to look out for who may be waiting to create another Bukit Kepong situation.
A brief look at the Army’s hospitals’ websites indicate that almost all their hospitals have hardly any patients, which will then beg the question. What do our army docs and medics do with so much free time on their hands? Shouldn’t they have gone instead of the UMNO club. Unless of course the help UMNO went to deliver was a sideshow, the main menu being publicity for UMNO or its leaders judging from the daily reporting in the MSM and TV images during prime time. Is this GE 13 election campaigning using the Somalians misery and our journalists lives to brain wash kampong folk out in Jengka and Baling?///–Blackhawk
All UMNO government actions are for election purposes, not just GE 13. NEP started it all.
#16 by cskok8 on Sunday, 4 September 2011 - 8:42 pm
The military medical and dental people were busy providing care in the interior areas of Sarawak; which the govt has not been able to provide for so long.
Wait, that was just before the state elections. Now back in base.