Tsunami Music

A team of musicians, filmakers, photographers, sound engineers have come together to produce a music CD and visual DVD album called Laya Project based on folk music of the communities affected by the December 2004 Tsunami.

If you love traditional music, please buy and help the abovementioned communities.

Jarak Memories

I’m sure those who went to Jarak in November with me noticed one of my t-shirts that read: McSHIT.

It is based on a true event as follows:

McShit

What A Day…

Office gives me a headache

You walk into the office and the first thing you see on your screen is the thing that makes your blood boil…

HAPPY NEW YEAR my arse!

One Year Later…

Me and my NGO staff handing over aid gifts for tsunami victims

It’s been slightly over a year now that the South Asian Tsunami struck 12 nations fringing the Indian Ocean. The earthquake that generated the equivalent to 60,000 Hiroshima A-bombs has all but been forgotten, especially by those whose lives were not directly affected by the tragedy. A year later we notice that the weather has gone awry, the sun sets slightly more to the northwest than on Christmas Day 2004….and asian tourists still shun going to disaster-affected areas.

A tsunami-hit home in Kuala Muda

Yes…not just that: even Malaysians shun beach areas. A friend of mine who runs a windsurfing school/facility in Port Dickson makes only around RM30 a month after paying his staff. He is now behind in terms of rent. That is Port Dickson…it was not affected at all by the killer waves that struck coastal areas some 400 kilometers to the north. Port Dickson that once commanded an average of 60% occupancy rate, fell to just over 30% early 2005. Among reasons cited was fear of tsunami. Even in the Perhentian Islands occupancy rate dropped in July 2005…again, fear of tsunami occuring there was the main reason. I suppose not many people liked high-school geography.

My childhood friend, Capt Shamsulkamar Samsuddin (MAS Aircraft Captain) and I in Kuala Muda

What about in Thailand? The number of tourist arrivals in the provinces of Phuket, Phang-nga and Krabi dropped from 2.9 million to 1.2 million over the same period, and corresponding revenue dropped from RM490 million to RM150 million. Again, superstitious Asians have shunned from going there, especially from Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan, whose numbers fell most precipitously. Asian people believe that it is not auspicious to visit places where there are a number of people who died.

Therefore it is up to divers like us to play our part in helping countries of this region to boost their tourism sales…by using our network of divers and nature lovers aggressively to bring in more tourists.

If we don’t help ourselves, no one else will…

EFR

PADI Emergency First Response

I’ve completed my Emergency First Response today. Now all I have to do is my Rescue Diver course..then I’ll submit for my PADI Master Scuba Diver rating.

Old School

ยุ่งน่า

I came to work today just to find out that my leave for the rest of the year has been approved. However, luckily I came to office today as the package of three music VCDs from Thailand had arrived. I bought a VCD of a concert by Jetrin Wattanasin for an old album called 108-1009 that was released back in 1993; another karaoke VCD of a group called U4 (a one-hit wonder) that existed back in 1994; and a karaoke VCD of a group called LoSo (Lo Society) for songs released mid 1990s.

Yes, I’m an old school person…conservative in some matters…not all though.