Thursday, November 22, 2007

Altantuya stories generate responses

I wrote a number of stories on Altantuya murder case for Onoodor, a Mongolian language daily newspaper, which you can find here, here, here, and here. Tomorrow another one will be published on the front page of Onoodor newspaper about phone calls the two accuseds made to each other before and after the deceased was murdered. Some of the stories generate very good responses from Mongolian readers, strongly demanding justice over the Altantuya case from the Malaysian court. And, the most read stories of the UB Post web site are also the ones about the murder too.

My previous post "Malaysia-Is it a good destination to learn English?" generated 47 responses on Susan Leone's blog here. Glad to know that Malaysians caring a Mongolian blogger's perspective point of view to the case. I don't think mine is the only voice, there are dozens of blogs by Mongolians. Unfortunately those are in Mongolian language. Maybe this is one example of why Mongolian youths want to go to foreign country to learn English, which is becoming widely popular since the early 1990s when Mongolia opened to the world. I wish my fellow Mongolians study global spoken languages and walk shoulder-to-shoulder with the development of the world. That's why here are so many businesses that bridge Mongolians with Malaysia, Australia, USA, and Singapore. Remember Altantuya's friend was saying at the court that she was coming to Malaysia with the help of Help Center here.

Malaysia is not a perfect place. Malaysians are not perfect people. We do drive our cars like a maniac, throw empty mineral water bottles to the side of the road when we could not find a river, forgot to flush the toilet every now and then and blamed the singaporean whenever we could. But we never made it a habbit of finding a foreign students, blow a hole on their head, stuff a c4 inside their bodies and all that fancy stuffs. Happens sometimes but the frequency may be as rare as another genghis khan being born in Mongolia.

So to tell everyone that malaysia is not safe anymore is like telling everyone not to go to mongolia coz genghis khan will wait for you at the airport with his sword and armours.

It is still safe here to study here. Of course I am assuming that study means you go to school and does not include selling a billion dollar hardware and dating a married man at the same time. Its a different game. Ordinary folks like us would not do that to any mongolians and we would love to hand over whoever killed any mongolians to mongolians. We are nice people. We love Genghis khan too.
In the other development, an editor from the Asiasentinel.com contacted me to know whether Mongolian press outlets have published a photograph of Altantuya posed with the accused Abdul Razak Baginda and Malaysian Deputy Premier Najib Razak, who are still denying that he does not know her. Up till now, I did not see that photograph published on Mongolian press, but I think I have seen an image depicting Altantuya sat behind a table together with Razak Baginda and Najib Razak. But that was a computer generated one, obviously visible.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another Foreigner to get himself in trouble in Mongolia was Abdul Razak Baginda, arms dealer, political analyst and close associate of the Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister.ln the now famous “Altantuya” case he allegedly fathered her second child and she went to Malaysia to demand a large amount of money from him. Baginda had her murdered by 2 special services police who then blew her body to pieces. Her arrival records and hotel records were destroyed by Police. The 3 men are now before the court in Malaysia and Baginda has been linked to the plot since the discovery of hand written notes.
Altantuya and her friend Marla a green eyed half Russian, half Mongolian girl were both well known prostitutes. Marla’s father is an artist and Altantuya married Madai the ego maniac singer from “Black Rose”, a narcissistic Hip Hop Band. Eddie Chua a Malaysian Journalist came to Mongolia last winter to stir up this case, he wrote letters to the editor in English language papers claiming to be an ordinary Malaysian citizen, and then proceeded to find out as much dirt as he could.