KUALA LUMPUR, May 29 — The Ministry of Health (MoH) announced that there were a total of 9,020 new cases reported up till 12pm today, pushing the cumulative figure for positive cases in Malaysia to 558,534.
Today marks the highest number of cases recorded in Malaysia!
Top 5 states with the most cases today:
Selangor +2836, Kelantan +907, KL +789, Sarawak +726, Johor +468
(New High in Kelantan and Labuan with 907 cases and 253 cases respectively)
State Welfare, Community Wellbeing, Women, Family and Childhood Development Minister Datuk Seri Fatimah Abdullah said that her ministry has given the green light to those centres that have applied.
“For other childcare centres, however, if there is a need, they must apply to the childhood division of the ministry before they are allowed to accept the children of essential workers,” Fatimah said in a statement.
A global survey gauging trust in society finds that people of a feather really do flock together.
THE person you see in the mirror is the most trusted.”
No, that is not a self-help mantra or nostalgia for Michael Jackson’s old hit Man in the Mirror.
Rather, as the 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer reveals, that is a common belief in the world when it comes to trust.
People now are increasingly reliant on a “person like yourself” (rising 6% in trust) more than the “leaders” of society like CEOs, government officials, technical experts or even academic experts, according to global communications firm Edelman’s annual survey that measures trust levels in the world.
Says Edelman Malaysia managing director Robert Kay, it reflects the way people in Malaysia are increasingly sharing and weighing information and opinions online.
“When it comes to information on social networking sites, content sharing sites and online-only information, Malaysians trust friends and families more at 74% compared to a company CEO at 57% or elected officials at 53%,” shares Kay at the launch of the Barometer in Kuala Lumpur last Tuesday.
For its fifth survey in Malaysia, Edelman polled 1,350 Malaysians online from October to November last year.
What some might find surprising is that in today’s celebrity-obsessed world, online personalities rake in only 45% “believers”, while celebrities rank last in their trustworthiness at 30%.
Interestingly, Malaysians’ overall trust in online content, specifically that shared on social media has dipped seven points to 42%.
Kay points to the rampant sharing of misinformation online in the past year as the main reason.
Consequently, search engines hold their lead as the most trusted source for information at 66%, he adds, as people feel they have more control over what they read and see.
The rise in peer-to-peer trust inevitably coincides with the decline in public faith in public institutions and the business world.
Faith in the press among the “informed public”, however, has jumped 13% – from 46% last year to 59% this year.
Asked how much they trust the media – on a scale of zero to nine – to do the right thing, Malaysian citizens say they have a lot more faith in the press than before.
This, says Edelman, puts Malaysia’s more informed citizens’ trust in media at the same level as the elite of the United States.
“Malaysia has one of the biggest rises in media trust among the informed public globally, possibly due to the constant coverage of alleged corruption at 1MDB,” Kay notes, stressing that it is crucial for the media to continue pursuing rigorous, balanced and transparent reporting to maintain credibility.
While the survey did not distinguish between trust in local and international media, the trust in the media in Asia highlights the perceived role of the media in this region, Edelman Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa CEO David Brain reportedly said in Mumbrella Asia, a discussion site on the region’s media.
“The media – through Western eyes – is expected to keep politicians to account, but in Asian countries such as Singapore and Malaysia, there is ‘a social contract that the role of the media is about nation building’, and less about revealing the truth,” Brain had explained.
In a panel discussion on the Barometer results, The Malaysian Insider CEO Jahabar Sadiq points out that even as trust in business captains and political leaders fell, those who are perceived to be critical and caring of society and are vocal on social media, such as CIMB group chairman Datuk Seri Nazir Razak and former Cabinet minister Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz, are deemed as “trustworthy”.
Comparing Malaysia to Britain and the United States, Umno Youth exco member Shahril Hamdan suggests the dip in public trust towards the government is a natural development as the nation matures.
“As democracy matures, the cynicism level of people toward the government increases.
“Regardless of how the government communicates or performs, people will put less trust in the government and its leaders.”
Maxis Malaysia Head of Consumer Business Dushyanthan Vathiyanathan believes that it is time for public institutions and the business sector to transform and engage more with people.
“People now are interested in knowing what is happening and not in what you tell them.
By Hariati Azizan The Star/Asia News Network
“You have to be transparent with them and inform them of anything and everything. That’s because now they have information and do their checks.”
Related:
Panel Discussion of the 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer for Malaysia
Competent leader vital for Information, Communications and Culture Ministry
The candidate should be someone well rounded, well experienced, not too old or too young
FOR
some time now, there has been talk on whether culture is a good fit for
the Information, Communications and Culture Ministry (MICC). Some
believe culture would be better off parked under the Tourism Ministry.
Culture and tourism, to them, are lines out of the same song not quite jiving with communications or information.
Then,
there is talk of some areas of duplication between MICC and the
Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry (Mosti). Both should merge
as there are common areas, it has been said.
These ministries
aside, some folk have been lobbying that a new ministry, the
Information, Communications and Technology (ICT) Ministry, be set up
with the MICC being done away with.
All this talk has resurfaced now that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak,
fresh off his election win, is busy selecting candidates for his new
Cabinet line-up that might be announced in the coming days.
There
is certainly some overlap between Mosti and MICC, making sense for them
to be merged into one entity. Arts, on the other hand, could be part of
the Youth and Sports Ministry or spun off into a new ministry under
Arts and Heritage.
It is not an easy decision, but whatever the
outcome, one things is for sure Malaysia's Cabinet should not be bigger
than China's, which has a population of 1.6 billion, as opposed to our
28 million.
Australia and Singapore have gone though the same
phase that Malaysia is going through now in terms of merging and
segregating its various ministries. In 2001, Singapore's Ministry of
Communications and Information (MCI) was expanded to include Arts.
Over
a decade later, the Arts and Heritage portfolios became a part of the
culture ministry. At present, the role of the MCI is to oversee the
development of the ICT, media and design sectors, public libraries and
the government's information and public communications policies.
On
a similar note, Australia expanded its Communications Ministry to
include Arts in 1994. Four years later, the ministry expanded to include
information technology (IT).
However, in 2007, Arts became a
part of the Environment/Heritage Ministry. The Communications/IT
Ministry was renamed as the Broadband, Communications and Digital
Economy.
Even the United Nations has a specialised agency to deal
with technology in the form of the International Telecommunication
Union because the role of the Internet and broadband transcends all
boundaries.
The vision of Malaysia's MICC is to be a pioneer in
promoting the 1Malaysia Concept based on national principles to achieve a
harmonious and gracious nation. The ministry's main aspiration is to
enhance Malaysia as a global ICT hub in the region, to ensure
information from all sources of media is accurate and precise and to
preserve and promote Malaysia's heritage and culture to the world.
Culture
preservation is vital in the era of the social media, but once there is
widespread awareness, culture can be placed under the Arts, Culture and
Heritage Ministry, or could even be one of the units under the Prime
Minister's Department or the Tourism Ministry.
There are even
suggestions that MICC be part of the Prime Minister's Department so that
it would fall directly under the Prime Minister's purview. However,
whether this is feasible remains to be seen.
Communications and
information have become vital because of the digital era, and their role
in Malaysia might need to be reviewed. Australia and Singapore felt the
“need to change because of the need to redistribute and re-focus its
ministerial workload to improve public communications and engagement for
an increasingly diverse society in the age of social media and rapid
technology progress”.
All this brings us to the next question: Who is best to lead the MICC?
There
are many talented people out there, but the industry feels the choice
of candidate should encompass someone “well rounded, well experienced,
but not too old or too young”. The person, while having sound knowledge
of Law and Economics, should also fulfil the most important criterion
being savvy enough about the workings of the Internet and the new/social
media.
The choice of candidate is important because there is no
room for mistakes, unlike the blunders made in the past over spectrum
allocation and technology choices. Most importantly, the candidate
should not regress but rather, take the nation forward on the digital
path.
Friday Reflections - By B.K. Sidhu
● Deputy news editor B K Sidhu has some candidates in mind, but they are not politicians.