Friday, October 3, 2008











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Thursday, October 2, 2008

Malaysia focused on 2020 vision

A polished voice reminds passengers over the tannoy that central Kuala Lumpur is just 28 minutes away.

Landscape gardening in the centre of Kuala Lumpur highlighting the country's 2020 vision
Malaysians are regularly reminded of their long-term aspirations

Malaysians are justifiably proud of the high-speed rail link connecting their capital with its ultra-modern airport 30 miles south of the city.

The line - part of a huge investment in the transport system over the past 15 years - enables jet-lagged tourists to curl up in their hotel beds in double-quick time.

Just as importantly, it ensures that executives from the growing number of multinationals lured to Cyberjaya - Malaysia's new hi-tech city on the outskirts of KL - do not miss any important deadlines.

Fourteen-year countdown

Much of this development has taken place in the name of another deadline - one which has been the subject of public debate for 15 years and which policymakers dare not ignore.

In 1991, Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad grandly set out a vision of Malaysia becoming a fully developed country by 2020.

Boatbuilding on the island of Pulau Pangkor
Despite industrialisation, the rural economy is still important

Malaysia is now more than half way through this 30-year journey and Dr Mahathir's successor as prime minister, the unobtrusive but respected Mr Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, knows the clock is ticking.

Unveiling the government's latest five-year economic blueprint earlier this year, Mr Abdullah said the 2020 goal was "challenging".

He acknowledged that much had to be done if the country's dream of achieving advanced social and economic status was to become a reality.

For this to happen, he said, the often stark economic inequalities which exist within Malaysia's diverse ethnic population of Malays, Chinese, Indians and other races had to be tackled.

Racial imperative

Malays have dominated the country's government and civil service since independence in 1957, but they lag well behind their Chinese counterparts in terms of average incomes and economic clout.

Economic disparities have narrowed since 1991, as poverty has been substantially reduced and unemployment has stayed low.

A branch of the Bumiputra Bank in Kuala Lumpur
The government wants more Malays to own shares

But the government knows many people have been left behind - and the fruits of strong growth must be spread more widely and opportunities increased if the country's famed racial harmony is to be maintained.

Other worries include Malaysia's declining global competitiveness - it fell below neighbouring Thailand for the first time in a recent study - and the need to improve governance and public administration.

Most pervasive, however, is a sense that while Malaysia has made huge strides economically since 1991, its people, in terms of their mindset and outlook, have struggled to keep pace.

In the prime minister's own words, the country needs to "move away from the notion that it is a nation with first-class infrastructure but third-class mentality".

Signs of this anomaly were evident when Mr Abdullah recently visited Pulau Pangkor, a small island off the west coast of the country, for the inauguration of a planned fish farm and nature reserve.

Backers of the 100m Malaysian ringgit (£14m) biotechnology project - including Taiwanese company HiQ Biotech International - are eyeing up the huge Chinese export market for fresh fish.

Explaining its decision to invest in Malaysia, HiQ Biotech praised its political stability, infrastructure and the investment incentives on offer - factors which have also persuaded the likes of Dell and Tesco to announce new ventures here in recent weeks.

But while emphasising Malaysia's commitment to foreign investment, Mr Abdullah publicly warned the Malaysian boss of the business to work hard and not to let his foreign backers down.

Malaysians listen to Prime Minister Badawi speaking at Pulau Pangkor
Malaysians are urged to be more entrepreneurial but warned of risks

Later, he urged Malaysian entrepreneurs not to become greedy and to avoid diversifying before their core businesses were solid.

With a well-educated, English-speaking workforce, business-friendly government and strong transport infrastructure, Malaysia is well-equipped to compete in the global economy.

But critics fear that a lingering ambivalence over the social changes resulting from wealth creation, allied to the bureaucratic machine of a powerful state, could stunt growth.

Economic competence

Nevertheless, most experts forecast a rosy future for Malaysia's economy which - apart from 1998 - has grown every year since 1991.

The International Monetary Fund has praised the government's "skilful and pragmatic" handling of the economy and expects average growth rates of above 6% over the past decade to be maintained.

On a recent visit, EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson held Malaysia up as a "showcase for rapid industrialisation".

Wealth generated by Malaysia's oil and gas reserves has bolstered the public finances, while the Malaysian ringgit has risen steadily against the US dollar since its peg to the currency was removed in 2005.

Below this apparently serene surface, however, there are doubts about Malaysia's capacity to drive its growth agenda.

Boy outside his house on the island of Pulau Pangkor
Wealth gaps have narrowed but are still acute in some rural areas

Critics argue that red tape and outdated laws - such as preferential quotas for Malays in education and housing and restrictions on foreign interests owning Malaysian companies - are hampering growth.

More emphasis is needed on sectors like outsourcing, tourism and Islamic finance, where Malaysia can compete globally, rather than high-cost manufacturing industries such as the troubled car sector, they say.

"There is a reliance on old strategies and programmes - including failed or outdated racial-based ones in a wide range of sectors - which will adversely affect the country's competitive and human resource edge," argues Lim Teck Ghee, director of the Centre for Public Policy Studies.

Fast-growing companies need to be given incentives, whatever the ethnicity of their key players, Dr Lim says.

"Malaysian companies are uniquely constrained by outdated race-based social and economic policies that add considerably to the cost of doing business and prevent them from expanding more rapidly."

Neighbourhood rivalry

As well as the challenge of India and China, Malaysia faces fierce competition on its doorstop.

Singapore trumped Malaysia when it signed a free trade agreement with the United States in 2003, the first Asean member to do so.

This was particularly painful since Malaysia-US trade, now worth $44bn, comfortably eclipses that between Singapore and the US.

Malaysia remains an ally of the US and talks on a free trade agreement, now underway, could be concluded by 2008.

Publish Post
Counterfeit DVDs being sold in Kuala Lumpur
The authorities have pledged to get to grips with entertainment piracy

One potential obstacle is US concerns over entertainment piracy.

Travellers on Malaysian buses can enjoy Mission Impossible III in its entirety although the film is not available on DVD, illustrating the scale of the problem facing the authorities.

Counterfeit DVDs and CDs are two a penny on Petaling Street in Kuala Lumpur, proving an inevitable draw for tourists.

The array of titles is as remarkable as the speed in which the hawkers hustle away their tables when policemen appear on the scene.

Malaysia is economically vibrant, but with 2020 on the horizon, its leaders will be as aware as anyone that appearances can sometimes be deceptive.

Malaysian oil plan gets partners

The Malaysian company with ambitious plans for a $7bn (£3.5bn) oil pipeline has signed deals with Indonesian and Saudi Arabian partners.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (left) and Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
The deals were witnessed by the leaders of Malaysia and Indonesia

Trans-Peninsula Petroleum plans to build a 193 mile (310km) pipeline across Northern Malaysia.

The pipeline would bypass the Malacca Strait, allowing oil tankers to be loaded with crude away from the busy and often dangerous waterway.

Many similar projects have failed in the past.

Trans-Peninsula Petroleum said that it hoped Monday's deals would help to reassure any sceptics.

"We wouldn't be here today, we wouldn't have the support of the Saudi partners, if this project was not feasible or this project cannot be financed," Trans-Peninsula Petroleum's chairman Rahim Kamil Sulaiman said.

The company's partners are Saudi Arabia's Al-Banader International and the Indonesian steel pipeline maker, PT Bakrie & Brothers.

Notorious passage

The pipeline plans to run across Northern Malaysia, allowing Middle Eastern oil to be refined in Kedah on the north-western coast, piped to Kelantan on the eastern coast, where it would be shipped to Japan, China and South Korea.

Should the project be completed, then it would divert about 30% of the oil currently that goes through the Malacca Strait.

About half of the world's crude oil is shipped through the Malacca Strait.

The busy waterway is notorious for robberies and hijackings, although they have fallen in frequency since Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore increased patrols in 2005.

Trans-Peninsula Petroleum signed up its partners on the sidelines of the World Islamic Economic Forum in Kuala Lumpur.

Earlier in the day, Trans-Peninsula also signed deals with Malaysia's Ranhill Engineers and Constructors and Indonesia's PT Tripatra for the design and construction of the pipeline.

Country profile: Malaysia

Consisting of two regions separated by some 640 miles of the South China Sea, Malaysia is a federation of 13 states and three federal territories.

It is one of the region's key tourist destinations, offering excellent beaches and brilliant scenery. Dense rainforests in the eastern states of Sarawak and Sabah, on the island of Borneo, are a refuge for wildlife and tribal traditions.

Downtown area and Petronas towers, Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia made the transformation from a farm-based economy

Ethnic Malays comprise some 60% of the population. Chinese constitute around 26%; Indians and indigenous peoples make up the rest. The communities coexist in relative harmony, although there is little racial interaction.

Although since 1971 Malays have benefited from positive discrimination in business, education and the civil service, ethnic Chinese continue to hold economic power and are the wealthiest community. The Malays remain the dominant group in politics while the Indians are among the poorest.

Malaysia's economic prospects remain healthy, although it faces fierce competition from its neighbours, and from China and India.

Free trade talks were opened with the US, but the US has said it will not be able to conclude a deal in 2007 as the two sides failed to meet a deadline to secure a deal before President George W Bush's fast-track trade authority expired in June.

The country is among the world's biggest producers of computer disk drives, palm oil, rubber and timber. It has a state-controlled car maker, Proton, and tourism has considerable room for expansion.

But it also faces serious challenges - politically, in the form of sustaining stability in the face of religious differences and the ethnic wealth gap, and, environmentally, in preserving its valuable forests.

Malaysia's human rights record has come in for international criticism. Internal security laws allow suspects to be detained without charge or trial.

Pregnancy timeline

Weeks 1-4
Fertilisation occurs and a ball of quickly multiplying cells embeds itself in the lining of the uterus.
In the UK pregnancy is calculated from the first day of the woman's last period so for as much as three weeks of this first month she might not be actually pregnant. When fertilisation does occur the tiny mass of cells called a blastocyst at this stage embeds itself in the lining of the womb which is already thickening to support it.
Week 5
The mass of cells is developing fast and becomes an embryo. For many women the first sign of pregnancy is a missed period.
Shopbought tests are considered largely reliable so the mother-to-be does not have to have her pregnancy confirmed by her GP. If a first test is negative a second one a few days later may prove positive as hormone levels in the urine rise.

Week 6
The embryo officially becomes a foetus. It is about the size of a baked bean and its spine and nervous system begin to form.
The foetus already has its own blood system and may be a different blood group from its mother. Blood vessels are forming in what will become the umbilical cord and tiny buds which will become limbs appear.
Week 7
The baby´s heart is beginning to develop. Morning sickness and other side effects of early pregnancy may take hold.
All medication including supplements need to be carefully checked as the foetus is undergoing vital development in the first 12 weeks. If the woman has not told her GP or community midwife she is pregnant yet now is a good time to do so.

Week 8
It is quite common to have a first scan at this stage if the woman has had a previous miscarriage or bleeding.
An early scan is often done through the vagina and is used to check the pregnancy is not ectopic. It should show up the baby´s heartbeat. The nervous system is also developing rapidly especially the brain. The head gets bigger and eyes form under the skin of the face. The foetus' limbs are growing and look more like arms and legs. All internal organs are developing and becoming more complex.

Week 9
Women who may be at higher risk of passing on sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia should be offered a blood test before 10 weeks.
These conditions are rare but serious inherited blood disorders. They are more common in people of certain ethnic backgrounds including African, Caribbean and some Asian and Mediterranean communities. If the mother is found to carry the gene for either condition, the father is offered a test. If both parents are found to be carriers then they are offered the option of testing the foetus in the womb.

Week 10
A scan at 10-13 weeks is recommended to pin down the date of the pregnancy.

Week 11
The umbilical cord is fully formed providing nourishment and removing waste products. The foetus looks fully human now.

Week 12
By this week the threat of miscarriage is much reduced. Many women announce their pregnancy to friends and colleagues.
The foetus is growing in length much more quickly by now it is about eight cm long and weighs about 60 grams. The placenta is now wellformed though it's not yet doing its full job it takes over fully in week 14. The mother is likely to have her first scan this week.

Week 13
The womans uterus is becoming larger and is starting to rise out of the pelvis. The foetus can move its head quite easily.

Week 14
Third of the way through. The average pregnancy lasts 266 days or 280 days from the first day of last period.
Week 15
Screening for Downs syndrome is offered about now. A simple blood test is carried out first then further tests may be offered.
On the basis of the blood test results the woman may opt for a Chorionic Villus sample or an amniocentesis which would diagnose chromosomal abnormalities. However these diagnostic tests have a small risk of subsequent miscarriage. An alternative to blood tests is a nuchal translucency scan a new scan offered by some larger hospitals. But again an amniocentisis would be required for firm diagnosis.

Week 16
The foetus now has toe and finger nails eyebrows and eyelashes. It is also covered with downy hair.
The hair that will cover the baby until the last week or so of pregnancy - called lanugo - starts to form. This hair is very fine more like down and it probably serves as some form of insulation and protection for the skin.

Week 17
The foetus can hear noises from the outside world. By this stage the mother is visibly pregnant and the uterus is rising.

Week 18
By this stage the foetus is moving around a lot - probably enough to be felt.

Week 19
The foetus is now about 15-20cm long and weighs about 300g. Milk teeth have formed in the gums.

week 20
Half way through pregnancy now. Almost all mothers are offered a routine scan. The foetus develops a waxy coating called vernix.
The scan can show the foetus in fine detail and often reveal if the baby is a boy or a girl. However not all hospitals offer to tell parents the sex of the child - and not all parents want to know.
Week 21
The mother may feel short of breath as her uterus pushes against her diaphragm leaving less space for the lungs.
The mother may be offered another ultrasound scan around this time. The scan can check the baby´s spine internal organs and growth are normal.

Week 22
Senses develop: taste buds have started to form on the tongue and the foetus starts to feel touch.

Week 23
The skeleton continues to develop and bones that form the skull begin to harden - but not fully.

Week 24
Antenatal checkup and scan to check the baby´s position. A baby born this early does sometimes survive.
A baby born at 24 weeks may possibly survive but it would have severe breathing difficulties as its lungs would not be strong enough to cope. It would also be very thin lightweight and susceptible to infections.
week 25
All organs are now in place and the rest of the pregnancy is for growth. Preeclampsia is a risk from here onwards.
This potentially fatal condition causes high blood pressure protein in the urine and swelling caused by fluid retention. The causes are unclear but research suggests it may be linked to an immune reaction to the foetus or the placenta. If the condition is serious women may be advised to take drugs to lower their blood pressure and in some cases an early caesarean or induction may be performed.

Week 26
The foetus skin is gradually becoming more opaque than transparent.

Week 27
The foetus measures about 34cm and weighs about 800g.

Week 28
Routine checkup to test for preeclampsia. Women with Rhesus negative blood will also be tested for antibodies.
If the mother has Rh negative blood but the baby is Rh positive she can develop antibodies to her baby´s blood during labour. This is not a problem in the first birth but can affect subsequent pregnancies and result in stillbirth. Fortunately treatment is simple and effective.

Week 29
Some women develop restless leg syndrome in their third trimester.
This is sensations such as crawling tingling or even cramps and burning inside the foot or leg - often in the evening and at night disturbing sleep and making the mother feel she needs to get up and walk around. No-one knows what causes this harmless but irritating condition.

Week 30
Braxton Hicks contractions may begin around now. They are practice contractions which dont usually hurt.
These are irregular, painless contractions which feel like a squeezing sensation near the top of the uterus. If contractions become painful or occur four times an hour or more, the woman should call a doctor as she may be in early labour.

Week 31
The foetus can see now and tell light from dark. The mother´s breasts start to produce colostrum about now
This high calorie milk is produced by the mother to feed the baby for the first few days after birth before normal milk starts.

Week 32
Another antenatal appointment. The foetus is about 42cm and weighs 2.2kg. A baby born now has a good chance of survival.

Week 33
From now the baby should become settled in a head downwards position. A midwife can help to move it if necessary.

Week 34
The mother may find it more difficult to eat full meals as the expanded uterus presses on her stomach.

Week 35
If the mother has been told she may need a planned caesarean, now is a good time to discuss it further.

Week 36
The baby´s head may engage in the pelvis any time now.

Week 37
The baby´s lungs are practically mature now and it can survive unaided. The final weeks in the womb are to put on weight.

Week 38
Babies born from this week onward are not considered early.

Week 39
Another ante-natal appointment. The mother has reached her full size and weight by now.
Week 40
In theory the baby should be born this week. The mother´s cervix prepares for the birth by softening.
Week 41
First babies are often up to a week late but if there are signs of distress to mother or child the birth will be induced.