Archive for October, 2006

Another call for a dive trip - Mataking

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

A dive trip I will have to pass as November is one busy month. The trip planned on November end will cost RM2500 for 6days 5nights. So ,where is Mataking? An island in the Celebes Sea.

Celebes Sea
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The Sea is in the form of a huge basin, and plunges as deep as 6,200 m.The Celebes Sea is a piece of an ancient ocean basin that formed 42 million years ago in a setting far from any land mass. The border between the Celebes and the Sulu Sea is at the Sibutu-Basilan Ridge.
The Celebes Sea has somewhat attained an international notoriety for its pirates who prey not only on small time fishermen but also giant container ships. Nowadays, these pirates have high-tech weapons and equipments and ride on high-speed motorboats.

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Mataking

A Malaysian island known for its beautiful landscape and its underwater richness. Mataking is located on the east coast of Sabah not far from the more renowned island of Sipadan and Mabul. It is one of the latest additions on the diving map of Sabah and is fast becoming a divers haven due to its largely unexplored diving sites. Located to the north of Mabul Island, Mataking is about 3 times the size of Sipadan and is only a 40 minutes boat ride away from the town of Semporna on mainland Sabah.

Just take a look at this breathtaking aerial view.

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Oh how I miss this!! Always wanted to go here!Too expensive - probably need to go private practice to maintain my hobby! He!He!

Rape - where are we?

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

I was bored and I switched on the idiot box to channel 70 of Astro. It was their Star News and they were talking about somebody’s comment on rape which is causing an uproar in Western Australia. It sounded religious or is it just a chance for people to make it a religious issue? Rape is rape - how can a crime be a religious issue? All religion forbids it - a sin! So again, an irresponsible act by some idiotic individual has managed to make the society react to it as a religious issue. I blame the media? Well it is too boring to just simply do a story spread without having a twist to it - religion - somebody has breach a forbidden act. Even an aethist who rapes would be given a religion to sensationalise news.

Then I make some calls and was sent a paper cutting of the news that made the headlines. A rape occured (like it is so rare - in america, a rape occurs every 2 minutes) and a religious leader made a remark that offended the women community in particular and the public in general.

According to the translation, (name deleted) said: “If you take out uncovered meat and place it outside on the street, or in the the garden or in the park, or in the backyard without a cover, and the cats come and eat it … whose fault is it, the cats or the uncovered meat.The uncovered meat is the problem.”

“If she was in her room, in her home, in her hijab (Islamic headscarf which covers the hair neck and shoulders), no problem would have occurred.”

Now the first part is what the issue in Australia is about - I think it is a dumb analogy. But I refuse to waste my saliva on some idiotic, narrow-minded, demented remark made by any individual. I am sure this is not a shared opinion as what will happen is that it will divide the society into two halves or maybe three and one will dominate - hopefully the wiser!

Now, the second part purely portrays a person who is not exposed to the world. A women can be raped anywhere. Our Malaysian reports as mentioned in an article by Jacyln Kee in 2003,WAO says, ” Statistics last year shows that only about 20% of rape incidents happened in public places, while nearly 70% of them happened in the “safety” of homes. Nearly 80% of rapists are people known by the survivor.”
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She goes on to write,“there is no single profile of rape survivors, save that they are all women (since rape is a gender specific crime in this country) - females as young as a few months old to elderly grandmothers and girls clad in baju kurung to miniskirts have been subjected to rape.”

And I like this statement that she wrote,

These are facts and numbers which effectively debunk most of our common beliefs about rape. If rape is about behaviour and clothes, then surely only one specific type of woman gets raped. If rape is about not going out late at night, then surely rapes should only happen after 7pm, outside of the homes by strangers. If terribly severe punishments can stop rape, then how does this work on most rapists who think they have not committed a crime since they are faultless in their actions; surely cases should have decreased in commensuration with harsher punishments through the years. If rape is the act of psychotics, then how is it possible that there are more than ten thousand madmen walking in our streets in a perfectly normal way?

So, where are we to preventing another rape in the next 2 minutes? Nowhere! Women, know your surrounding well, always be prepared like how you would prepare yourself from a snatch thief , pepper spray , a tazer, learn martial arts etc.etc. and above all teach your children to respect women and treat them with dignity, the art of self control even when the hormones go raging!

Carbuncle - the swollen painful nape

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Carbuncle is a spreading infection below the skin which causes the tissues to die (necrosis). The characteristics of it is that there are many openings which have pus or blood discharging from its centre. The centre may be soft but otherwise the surrounding tissue is firm and inflammed and the skin becomes warm and red. The condition commonly occurs among those with diabetes mellitus and the treatment is surgical with antibiotics administration.

The comonest surgical procedure is called saucerization in which the whole infected and dead tissue is excised leaving a large clean cavity which would require daily dressing for the wound to heal on its own.

Below is a young diabetic lady who had many similar episode and never learns that her diabetes and her sugar control is of utmost importance.

This is an elderly lady with diabetes who kept the infection for about 2 weeks and presented ill with sepsis.

This is another elderly lady who did not have diabetes but had a huge colllection of pus after a wound infection which she kept for so long that it extended down to her labia.

Do we need to smoke?

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Let me put the facts out straight! You and I may think we know it — but do we really? Is the saying really true - bad habits are hard to die!! or is it just an option we don’t want to make?

  • * About a third of the male adult global population smokes.

    * Smoking related-diseases kill one in 10 adults globally, or cause four million deaths. By 2030, if current trends continue, smoking will kill one in six people.

    * Every eight seconds, someone dies from tobacco use.

    * Smoking is on the rise in the developing world but falling in developed nations. Among Americans, smoking rates shrunk by nearly half in three decades (from the mid-1960s to mid-1990s), falling to 23% of adults by 1997. In the developing world, tobacco consumption is rising by 3.4% per year.

    * About 15 billion cigarettes are sold daily - or 10 million every minute.

    * About 12 times more British people have died from smoking than from World War II.

    * Cigarettes cause more than one in five American deaths.

    * Among WHO Regions, the Western Pacific Region* - which covers East Asia and the Pacific - has the highest smoking rate, with nearly two-thirds of men smoking.

    * About one in three cigarettes are consumed in the Western Pacific Region.

    * The tobacco market is controlled by just a few corporations - namely American, British and Japanese multinational conglomerates.

    Youth

    * Among young teens (aged 13 to 15), about one in five smokes worldwide.

    * Between 80,000 and 100,000 children worldwide start smoking every day - roughly half of whom live in Asia.

    * Evidence shows that around 50% of those who start smoking in adolescent years go on to smoke for 15 to 20 years.

    * Peer-reviewed studies show teenagers are heavily influenced by tobacco advertising.

    * About a quarter of youth alive in the Western Pacific Region will die from smoking.

    Health

    * Half of long-term smokers will die from tobacco. Every cigarette smoked cuts at least five minutes of life on average - about the time taken to smoke it.

    * Smoking is the single largest preventable cause of disease and premature death. It is a prime factor in heart disease, stroke and chronic lung disease. It can cause cancer of the lungs, larynx, oesophagus, mouth, and bladder, and contributes to cancer of the cervix, pancreas, and kidneys.

    * More than 4,000 toxic or carcinogenic chemicals have been found in tobacco smoke.

    * One British survey found that nearly 99% of women did not know of the link between smoking and cervical cancer.

    * One survey found that 60% of Chinese adults did not know that smoking can cause lung cancer while 96% were unaware it can cause heart disease.

    * At least a quarter of all deaths from heart diseases and about three-quarters of world’s chronic bronchitis are related to smoking.

    * Smoking-related diseases cost the United States more than $150 billion a year.

    Advertising

    * US-based multinational Philip Morris - the world’s biggest cigarette company - was the world’s ninth largest advertiser in 1996, spending more than $3 billion.

    * A survey a few years ago found that nearly 80% of American advertising executives from top agencies believed cigarette advertising does make smoking more appealing or socially acceptable to children.

    * Through advertising, tobacco firms try to link smoking with athletic prowess, sexual attractiveness, success, adult sophistication, adventure and self-fulfilment.

    * A survey in the UK found about half of smokers think that smoking “can’t really be all that dangerous, or the Government wouldn’t let cigarettes be advertised”.

    * A 1998 survey found that tobacco companies were among the top 10 advertisers in 18 out of 66 countries surveyed.

    * In Asia, tobacco companies are among the top 10 advertisers in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and the Philippines.

    * In Russia, according to press reports, foreign tobacco companies are the largest advertisers, accounting for as much as 40% of all TV and radio advertising.

    * In 1997, the tobacco industry’s spending on advertising in the United States was about $15 million a day ($5.7 billion for the year).

    * The tobacco industry has changed the way it advertises in the last 30 years. Now, only 10% of advertising expenditure goes to print and outdoor advertisements, while more than half goes to promotional allowances and items, such as t-shirts for young people or lighters and key rings.

    * After the entry of foreign multinational tobacco firms into Japan, the Republic of Korea and Thailand, youth and female smoking rose significantly.

    MALAYSIA

    * About half of all Malaysian men smoke.

    * Every day about 50 teenagers below the age of 18 start smoking

    * Studies show about 30% of adolescent boys (aged 12 to 18) smoke.

    * Smoking among female teens is rising. According to two studies on teens conducted in 1996 and 1999, the numbers of female teens smoking rose from 4.8% to 8%. Overall, the 1999 study found nearly one in five teens smokes.

    * Some studies have shown that lung cancer is rising at a rate of 17% a year.

    * Smoking is estimated to have caused more than half a million coronary events.

    * Smoking rates are highest in rural Kelantan and lowest in urban Penang and Sarawak.

    * Although there are restrictions on advertising, tobacco companies have found ways to bypass these laws through using brand names and remain the top advertisers. Heavily advertised products include the Benson and Hedges bistro, Dunhill accessories, Marlboro clothing, Kent Horizon Tours and Salem Cool Planet concerts.

    * Malaysia has been dubbed the “indirect advertising capital” of the world. Some of the tobacco industry’s most blatant efforts to target young people can be seen here.

    * Spending on tobacco advertising is extremely high. In 1997, the industry spent about $90 million, while in the year 2000, two tobacco firms alone reportedly spent more than US$40 million.

    * At least two tobacco companies were among the top 10 advertisers in recent years.
    2002/WHO

    Tobacco is the second major cause of death in the world. So, with all that, why is so difficult to quit?

  • Sharks and Sipadan

    Monday, October 30th, 2006

    Somewhere about 3 weeks after the barge incident at Sipadan in mid-May 2006, my friends and I decided to take a dive trip to Sipadan.

    We stayed at Borneo Divers.

    Then we went diving and this is what we saw. This was the first time I started taking underwater photographs.

    Sipadan is known for its white-tip and black-tip sharks. The also have hammerheads but we could not see any. Enchanting is all that I can say as we rest at the island.

    It was a beautiful night full of memories as I fade into never-neverland!

    While you are thinking….

    Sunday, October 29th, 2006

    As I impatiently await for the next dive trip, thougth I will share some of the photos I took during my previous dives. Enjoy

    Have a lovely Nemo Day