OFW Filipino Heroes

Sunday, January 27, 2013

FMT: Sabah, North Borneo the 81st Province of the Philippines

Explosive article written by Free Malaysia Today writer Mariam Mokhtar called Sabah North Borneo as the 81st Province of the Philippines for her article titled "Welcome to the Philippines 81st province"  January 25, 2013 Publication.

FMT NEWS: It is believed there about 1.75 million Filipinos in Sabah, who were allowed to settle in the state during Dr Mahathir Mohamad's premiership

People should be able to place their trust in the prime minister to head the elected government; some prime ministers achieve greatness, others are best forgotten. Many are mediocre, others gain international acclaim.

The future of one Malaysian prime minister might well lie in a cell. His crime? When he was in power, he did not act in the interests of the country, but was consumed by a passion to further his own political interests. He was prepared to sell his country to foreign nationals.

Last week, former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad admitted in a press conference that he had authorised the provision of ICs to Filipinos. The Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) on Sabah revealed that between 1970 and 1984, around 73,000 Filipino refugees had been allowed to settle permanently in Sabah. Pundits claim that today, there may be around 1.75 million Filipinos.

In 2011, the opposition alleged that around three million Indonesians had been absorbed into Malaysia and given citizenship, with Bumiputera privileges and most important of all, granted full voting rights.

The Wikipedia entry for the Philippines states that there are 80 provinces which are grouped into 17 regions depending on their geographical, cultural and ethnological features.

With these allegations, Peninsular Malaysia might as well be known as the 34th province of Indonesia, and Sabah should be recognized as the 81st province of the Philippines.

Mahathir tried to deflect criticism from his "Project IC" by making unfair comparisons with the granting of citizenship to Malayans by Tunku Abdul Rahman. When he was stung by the criticisms of sullying the name of the Father of Independence, Mahathir tried to backpedal, but the damage was already done.

Malaysians don't really care about Mahathir's racial origins, his ethnicity or his religious conviction. They do mind his deception and the manner in which he helped propel the Ketuanan Melayu myth to the detriment of all races and religions in Malaysia.

He championed the Malays above everyone else, but left out other Malaysian-born citizens, and tagged them with the "pendatang" label.

His adherence to his Malay bloodline, whilst ignoring his equally noble Indian ancestry, is what has probably made many people despise the Indian Muslims, through no fault of their own. Many disparaging remarks which appear to be directed at all mamaks, are in reality directed solely at Mahathir.

Private kitty

Mahathir used the ISA and Operasi Lalang to silence his critics. He created heavy industries and installed his own cronies in these ventures. He treated the Treasury like his own private kitty, bailed out favoured people, and thought nothing of losses being borne by the taxpayers. He brainwashed Malaysians, especially the Malays, into accepting a two-tiered society.

Mahathir asked us to "Look East" because of his personal spat with the West, but unbeknown to us, he did a private deal with Margaret Thatcher in the Pergau Dam scandal.

It is laughable that anyone should think the British will come and rescue Malaysia, like the cavalry charge in the cowboy movies.

British Prime Minister David Cameron and his government are more interested in flogging their old weaponry to Malaysia, saving their firms in an economically stagnant Europe and rejuvenate their flagging property market with Malaysian EPF money.

During Tony Blair's time, the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) was told to halt its investigations into the BAE arms sale to Saudi Arabia. Allegations of kickbacks to a Saudi prince proved embarrassing and Blair claimed that he was acting in the "national interest". Will Cameron be any different?

Recently, some professionals revealed that in their student days, they were not awarded scholarships or loans for further studies because they did not show allegiance to Umno, or that their parents were not pious Umno Muslims.

These are revelations from Malays who did not have the right connections but were able to scrape up just enough money to pay for their own education. Anyone who thinks Umno helps all Malays is deluded. Umno only assists Umno Malays.

The Sabah RCI has revealed that Umno is not concerned about illegal immigration. It places more value on being in power. Mahathir and Umno were prepared to sacrifice the harmony of the Sabah people and manipulate its history. What happened in Sabah will probably be proven to hold true for Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia. Will Najib Tun Razak hold similar RCIs for them?

When the RM17.7 billion Iskandar Malaysia project was launched in Johor in 2006, a visibly angry Mahathir said: "After the land is sold, the Malays will be driven to live at the edge of the forest and even in the forest itself. In the end, the area in Iskandar Malaysia will be filled with Singaporeans and populated with only 15 percent Malays."

Real justice

These words have now come to haunt Mahathir as the RCI has exposed his treachery; but Malaysians have to ask themselves what sort of a country they want to live in.

Last week, Mahathir tried to justify his action of granting MyKads to foreigners by saying, "Malaysia accepts foreigners to become citizens provided that they meet certain conditions."

Try telling that to the hundreds of thousands of Malaysians who live overseas. Families are torn apart because of unfair practices promulgated by Mahathir's Bumiputera only policies. These people were shunned despite being Malaysians who were born and brought up in Malaysia. They were treated shabbily. In the end, Malaysia lost a valuable resource.

Mahathir also said of the Project IC Filipinos, "Many of them in Sabah were not there for a day or two, but 20 or 30 years and can speak Malay. They have the right to be citizens."

Again, tell that to the thousands of Malaysians who are forced to live outside Malaysia, because their foreign-born spouses are considered persona-non-grata, despite being highly skilled and able to speak Malay.

As usual, none of this applies to the very rich or the very poor. People with money are welcome provided their wallets are always open. The very poor are welcome provided they vote for Umno.

Mahathir's lust for political power has left a humanitarian crisis in Sabah, and we are left to clear up the mess.

Najib should ensure that the Sabah RCI is not another whitewash like the Teoh Beng Hock RCI. He should prove that he is a firm leader by bringing Mahathir to justice. Real justice, not the sham justice which we have come to associate with the Malaysian courts.

Mariam Mokhtar is a FMT columnist.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

DOST ₱1 Billion, Phildev ₱5 billion Philippine PC Tablet Manufacturing for $100 each

"I look forward to the day when there's no longer imported PC (in the Philippines)." – Dado Banatao at the Gonegosyo Technopreneurship Summit. (Go Negosyo photo)

Very impressive and ambitious plan which been started the fund raising for the first Philippine design personal computer and pc tablet manufacturing initiated  Philippine Development Foundation (Phildev).

Reported at the Manila Bulletin (Friday) Philippines Can Supply PC Requirements would mean that the Philippines would stop relying on imported computers from china's low quality pc and would make the Philippines as a global supplier for affordable but good quality computers.

Manila Bulletin: With a skilled workforce capable of doing difficult chip design, this seemingly far-fetched vision is not impossible as the Philippine Development Foundation (Phildev) has already started planning this.

The Philippines should one day supply 100 percent of its own PC (personal computer) needs instead of shipping these in from South Korea, Taiwan, or China, according Silicon Valley-based technology entrepreneur Diosdado Banatao.

With a skilled workforce capable of doing difficult chip design, this seemingly far-fetched vision is not impossible as the Philippine Development Foundation (Phildev) has already started planning this.

Phildev is raising 5 billion from the private sector for this megaproject of which more than 500 million has already been raised.

"This (tablet computers) is a project we started last year. The tablet computer is just one component," said Banatao in an interview at the sidelines of the Go Negosyo Technopreneurship Summit.

"I look forward to the day when there's no longer imported PC because we're designing one. We have to gain confidence in developing products that are very viable. That's how developed countries did it, and we're buying their products"

The tablet computers are envisioned to be distributed to public schools at a very cheap cost at perhaps around $100 per unit. Software will be developed with the Department of Education and Department of Science and Technology. Government is reported to have also allocated around 1 billion for the project, but cost may be much more considering infrastructure requirement.

"By the time we're done deploying this, it will be a lot of money. The tablet is just one component of the project, there's infrastructure. Communication, long distance wifi, tablet, network – this whole thing will be needed by the Philippines," he said.

The Philippines must access the global market if it has to grow in technology ventures and bring a lot more wealth, said Banatao who founded Silicon Valley startups Mostron, Chips and Technologies, and S3 Graphics through which their IC design .

Investments should be made to become competitive in technology equipment, including PCs, in three parameters — performance, power consumption, and cost.

"In your smartphone, you'll see a bunch of chips. I've been kind of curious how many dollars were invested in making those work — with those three parameters. Roughly $3 billion were invested to make that smartphone work," said Banatao who design and manage design of chips that are now found in PCs and other electronic equipment.

There should be a complete intermarriage between business and science where workers have strong grasp on basic disciplines-- primarily math and science. The education system should be reformed for this.

"It is disappointing some schools are being guided more by business than learning. If some schools understand what parents go through to send their kids to school, they will put more content in the kids' minds because the parents pay for it."

Intensive technical education is inevitable if the country has to take off economically

"What we do at Phildev is we're working with government to attack this (commercialized education). If you look at the curriculum, and there's no depth in science, you should worry you're not getting the return for your money," he said, stressing it's through technology that Japan and Germany arose from destruction in previous wars.

"Japan became the number two economy within less than 20 years after World War II because they're deep in technology."

In Silicon Valley, where there are no unions because enterprises pay for brains and hardwork, technology innovators dig inspirations from the basics, according to Banatao.

"When I was at Mapua, we always had a set of problems at the back of each chapter. I solved all the problems in the book, whether Physics, Math. I did this twice – once before the test and another before the finals. I know that's severe, but that's me. Somehow I thought there should not be problem I can't solve.

That shows excellence one can strive for," he said.

"I brought that practice to Stanford where I was competing with top one percent of students in the world."

Banatao's Tallwood Venture Capital, a startup funder, has more than $600 million in investment portfolio in technology enterprises. Tallwood has a local affiliate investing here, Narra Venture Capital represented by Dr. Paco Sandejas.

"The biggest companies in Silicon Valley grew because they're practicing entreprenereurs grounded in deep technology. There are no compromises in wanting to use or acquire that knowledge," he said.

The wifi technology is also continuing to evolve — so that Silicon Valley companies are doubling capacity of data transmission.

"We're continuing to put a lot more money for wifi. It's just a matter of time, and (the technology) is potentially violating Shannon law. Probably we'll spend about half a billion dollar. You'll see that it's impact on people's lives is amazing," he said.

The challenge to practice expertise in a technology craft should drive many to entrepreneurship.

"There's no job here that can really challenge me, so I left for the US. That confidence will allow you to become an entrepreneur. It's not easy to become an entrepreneur especially when you deal with technology. Chances are you will fail in nine out of 10."

Among the success factors to technology entrepreneurship are a compelling need — if someone has long been looking for this product for a long time until one's product comes; execution — a cohesive plan for the first year, second year and so on; and a strong technical and management team. This team is pertinent in bringing in the funding as this team's payroll would also require a significant amount while the company is still struggling to survive .

The creation of a market for a technology startup is really a painstaking effort. It can take five to 10 years to create a market. On the other hand, an existing market for an existing product would give an entrepreneur readily-available data on the market.

"You think you can create a market. But I advise startups 'Don't do that. It can take five to 10 years to create a market. The nice thing with the market if it's an existing market is it has a lot of data. Market research is crucial. It's easier to develop a product based on existing markets with identifiable needs."

There may be successful technology entrepreneurial successes like that of Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg.

But most of the time it takes more years to create a market, Banatao said. It took Bill Gates, for one, 15 years to develop the PC, and it took Michael Dell, Dell Inc. founder who is now $14 billion worth, some time too in developing direct marketing for the PC.

One has to offer something really good amid competition.

"There is something positive and negative in any market. There are a lot of players you can compete against. If you bring in something good to that market, you have markets right away. But with strong competition, you have to be that much better. It's hard."

"The key thing is in identifying a need. It has to be very compelling – a way to gauge that is if someone says 'This is what I've been looking for — that's a definition of compelling. No one has addressed that need."

Venture capitalists should be present to finance startups even while it is yet to achieve profitable operation.

"You either commit to be that good, or you get out. It's a relentless effort, and that's where the investors come in. They have to continue to support you if you need more money because its relentless."

Planning is important in ensuring that one's product does not go obsolete.

"I want a situation where I make my own product obsolete."

Monitoring of key results in a technology enterprise is a constant challenge.

At Tallwood Ventures, the key results and targets are right in front of each staff, Banatao said. Each staff has to come up with weekly reports, and part of that report are monthly objectives that came out of the operating plan.

"Every employee should be working on some objectives. It has to be that accurate."

There should be a strategic planning the result of which is a product roadmap. However, when there is a need to change plans, change should be done.

Tallwood invests in the semiconductor and related industries.

Its investment portfolio in technology enterprises includes Accent, offering communication and metering technologies for the Smart Grid industry; Alphion, photonics component manufacturer; Amulaire, engaged in metal injection molding processes; Astute, advanced storage processor company; and Audience, Sandbridge, and Tram, fabless semiconductor firms.

The others are Sirf, developer of silicon and software platform for high-quality digital audio-video; Wave Semi, low power programmable solution provider; Wilocity, gigabit wireless solutions enabler; Stream Machine, MPEG-2 video recording supplier; Silicon Clocks, timing products maker; and Rio, optical transmitter manufacturer. (http://bit.ly/Y63LBF)

Manila Bulletin 

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