Rudyard Kipling"
“When you're left wounded on Afganistan's plains and
the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle
and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”
General Douglas MacArthur"
“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.” “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The Soldier stood and faced God
Which must always come to pass
He hoped his shoes were shining
Just as bright as his brass
"Step forward you Soldier,
How shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't
Because those of us who carry guns
Can't always be a saint."
I've had to work on Sundays
And at times my talk was tough,
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.
But, I never took a penny
That wasn't mine to keep.
Though I worked a lot of overtime
When the bills got just too steep,
The Soldier squared his shoulders and said
And I never passed a cry for help
Though at times I shook with fear,
And sometimes, God forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.
I know I don't deserve a place
Among the people here.
They never wanted me around
Except to calm their fears.
If you've a place for me here,
Lord, It needn't be so grand,
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand."
There was silence all around the throne
Where the saints had often trod
As the Soldier waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.
"Step forward now, you Soldier,
You've borne your burden well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
Enflaming brewery donations par for the course for PAS By R Nadeswaran
Thursday, July 25, 2024
Malaysiakini : Why is the issue being resurrected?
For over
30 years, breweries in Malaysia have been raising money for vernacular
schools and charitable organisations without a fuss.
Deputy Education Minister Wong Kah Woh said Tiger Beer raised over RM400 million for Chinese primary schools in that period.
But
last week, the Education Ministry raised a related issue: “The ministry
takes this seriously, and we wish to remind school administrators to
adhere to existing guidelines when it comes to organising programmes and
receiving donations.
“And this covers the prohibition of
receiving donations from gains made through gambling activities,
cigarette manufacturers, alcoholic beverage makers, and its likes as
they could jeopardise our students physically, intellectually.”
Why
the resurrection after all these years? The practice has been going on
for 30 years without any problems. When religion is intertwined with
politics, the whole issue takes a different and, perhaps, a dangerous
dimension.
What prompted it was a group photograph of a
presentation mock cheque with the brewery company logo on it. Deputy
Housing and Local Government Minister Aiman Athirah Sabu was among the
dozen people in it.
Selangor PAS Youth chief Mohamed Sukri Omar (top pic) took to Facebook to criticise Aiman, calling the matter an embarrassment.
“If
this is how an Amanah leader is going to behave, Islam’s sanctity will
be under threat by liberalisation masked as Islam,” he said on Facebook.
How does holding a piece of cardboard with a beer logo pose a threat or challenge the purity of a religion?
Deputy Housing and Local Government Minister Aiman Athirah Sabu
This
happens when two parties compete to see whose shade of green is
brighter. The party that shouts louder wins, regardless of how illogical
or irrational their conduct is.
Instead of standing on her ground, Aiman issued a condescending apology.
“I
believe people understand the situation and will not fall for the
slander being spread. People make mistakes, and in any case, I apologise
to those who may have been slighted by this,” Sinar Harian reported her as saying.
Transport Minister Anthony Loke said he would seek the cabinet’s view about revising the ministry’s guidelines at the cabinet meeting today.
“The
guideline should not have such restrictions, at least not for Chinese
primary schools,” he said. However, Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek
ruled out providing exemptions or reviewing guidelines that bar schools
from receiving funds generated from selling tobacco products and
alcoholic beverages.
So, will the issue be discussed and debated
or will the Madani government bow to the wishes of the majority who use
race and religion to pander to the Malay-Muslim electorate?
Will Teoh Beng Hock be a reckoning for MACC? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, July 22, 2024
Malaysiakini : Harapan to blame for state’s inaction
Teoh’s
demise is also an indictment against the Harapan alliance and the
political operatives who stood by the former DAP political aide’s family
when it was politically profitable but abandoned them when in power.
Teoh Lee Lan
What
we have to understand is that the questions and possible answers to
Teoh’s death are political. It should not be but it is just as the
Indira Gandhi case is a religious one, these cases tragically point to
the dysfunction of the investigative services of this country.
It
is not malicious (even though partisans may feel that it is) to recall
the justifications of political operatives for the inactions of those
with power when it came to the closure of the death of their fallen
comrade.
Lim Guan Eng attempted to shift the blame for the failure
to get justice for Teoh’s family to former prime minister Muhyiddin
Yassin.
This was just another example of how totally ineffectual
Harapan political operatives were in solving long-standing issues that
are important for a certain section of their supporters but also
reframing a system they campaigned on.
Can you see the same pattern today?
The
fact of the matter is that Harapan is to blame for the inaction of the
state when it came to discovering the truth behind Teoh’s murder.
DAP national chairperson Lim Guan Eng
How
dare Lim peddle the nonsense that it was “agreed” by the cabinet to
reopen the investigation but the then-home minister, Muhyiddin, was not interested in pursuing the case.
Indeed,
linking the inaction on Teoh’s death to the then-Harapan government
with the political manoeuvrings of the Sheraton Move is extremely
deceitful.
Where were all the high-profile ministers who had no
problem lurking around when it came to attending Teoh’s memorials, but
suddenly found themselves “voiceless” in the New Malaysia that we were
promised?
Political malfeasances
It must
have been a spit in the face for Teoh’s family that the personalities
involved in the death and farcical investigation of his murder seeped
into the Harapan bureaucracy and strutted around as if their sins had
been washed away.
Ceremony to commemorate Teoh’s 15th death anniversary on July 21
Contrast
this to the death of firefighter Muhammad Adib Mohd Kassim, who was not
only compensated by the state but whose death remains a mystery only
because the events that led to it are mired in the kind of corporate and
political malfeasances peculiar to Malaysia.
These days, the Madani state and the state security apparatus warn the public when it comes to “speculating” on the malfeasances that occur in the country’s administration of law and justice.
The
state is quick to clamp down on news coverage of hot-button issues when
it comes to the bureaucracy, but the reality is that this is the system
that Harapan promised to reform if they managed to claim power.
Mutually beneficial
There
is a connective tissue between the MACC and the political class, and it
is mutually beneficial for the MACC and the political class to be
simpatico.
Mind you, I am not making this claim. In 2020, former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad twice warned the MACC to stop harassing his comrades or “…we have to be very active in exposing all the wrong things that they carry out”.
It
says a lot about the dysfunction which could be classified as
criminality, when the person who once led the Harapan government can
threaten to expose the alleged malfeasance of the MACC if they continue
harassing his political operatives and ignore the fact that he
supposedly has “evidence” of wrongdoing, which should have been reported
to the “relevant” authorities.
And keeping silent when the MACC
is engaging in wrongdoing if they harass your political party means what
exactly? That you keep their sins and omissions to yourself if they
aided your coalition when in power?
It should make rational
Malaysians wonder what the relationship is between the political class
and the MACC at this moment in time.
Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail has said that the investigation papers on Teoh have been passed
to the Attorney-General’s Chambers. He also claimed - “the Royal
Malaysia Police has called back the witnesses to complete the
investigation papers…”
I hope that Teoh is the reckoning MACC
deserves but the question is, will the Madani state dare spook the
security establishment?
Kok implied that it was Umno
who gave the stand-down orders whingeing - “What could we do? We could
not enter the villages; we were chased out. They didn’t want our
presence to be too obvious and we adhered (to the request). This was a
sign of respect to our partners,” in the context of the criticism by an
Umno veteran.
DAP vice-chairperson Teresa Kok
Does
anyone else see the absurdity in this statement? Firstly, you are a
coalition partner in a federal government. If you are chased out of
villages, what are the federal police and election apparatus doing about
such electoral intimidation?
Secondly, how much influence does
Umno have when it comes to a PKR by-election, which enables them to give
orders to the DAP, with PKR saying nothing?
Kok went on with the
same talking points about how the DAP is a multicultural party and the
propaganda that is used against them has hampered their forays into the
rural Malay heartland.
Look, the DAP has had decades to cultivate a
rural base but the reality is that they concentrated on getting the
urban and semi-urban non-Malay, specifically Chinese votes.
DAP
was more than happy to leave the Malay vote to various Malay-centric
parties, which is why they now have to deal with Madani’s “don’t spook
the Malay mantra”, and who can forget that the justification for hooking
up with Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
As DAP veteran Lim Kit Siang reminded us,
the basis for hooking up with Mahathir was the rural Malay vote and of
course, Bersatu was different from the Malay-based Umno.
And then
there is the dilemma with Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh, which
is meant as a distraction. Kok said - “However when we get into
loggerheads with Umno and Umno Youth like before, the Malays see us as
being rude and racist.”
Familiar malarkey
First
of all, the Malays have moved on from Umno and the only people who seem
interested in what they have to say are the denizens of Madaniville.
DAP chairperson Lim Guan Eng has no problem talking about the scurrilous attacks by MCA on the police and the home minister but as usual, DAP likes taking on soft targets.
DAP chairperson Lim Guan Eng
But
then again we have seen all this malarkey before. Remember in that
not-so-great debate between Guan Eng and then-MCA president Choi Soi
Lek, where the former said - “It is discrimination when Umno tells the Malays they cannot progress without Umno. (I say) We can all progress together.”
Well,
is anyone in DAP telling this to UMNO now or is DAP still beating a
dead horse with MCA? Wait, don’t answer that. Apparently DAP still
thinks it is better not to confront someone like Akmal because the
Malays will think it is rude even though a majority of them have shifted
their allegiance to Perikatan Nasional/PAS.
So it is better for
these Malays to think of DAP as whipping boys rather than a political
party that opposes a theocratic state because God knows, nobody wants to
spook the Malays.
Years of demonising MCA as a “running dog” for
the establishment should have been a lesson for DAP, but now they are
slowly learning the cost of doing business with Malay power structures
on a federal level.
Not rocking the boat
When
some non-Malay Pakatan Harapan partisans tell people who demand reform
not to rock the Harapan boat - much like how Lim told non-Malays that
they do not need to “beg” - it is exactly the same position MCA was when
it was balancing expectations in the BN coalition.
DAP never gave MCA the benefit of this excuse, and neither should anyone who believes in any kind of institutional reform.
These
days, the people are left wondering if DAP will cave when it comes to
important policy issues because, with the creation of this coalition
government, all they seem interested in doing is justifying the policies
of the government, even if it goes against their campaign manifesto or
more damning, their so-called principles.
We
are always told that if not this then we have to accept the “Green
Wave”. I say why make the “Green Wave’s” job easier? Why lay the
foundation in terms of policy and governmental procedure (or lack of it)
for the “Green Wave”?
The question is, if DAP is being asked to
keep a low profile in certain elections to not spook the Malays, what
else are they asked to keep a low profile on? Exactly how does keeping a
low profile help the DAP base?
I know it may help the political
elites, their proxies and hangers-on but how exactly does it help the
non-Malays who make up the DAP base?
All this should not surprise
us. Remember what DAP big cheese Anthony Loke said - “So I wish to put
on record, as I said just now, on November 22, before Anwar Ibrahim went
to Istana Negara, I told him, as long as you can be prime minister, DAP
is willing to sacrifice anything, that is my commitment to Anwar.”
If past election results are anything to go by, Anwar has yet to make any headway with the Malays.
Ever since he came to power in November 2022, he has tried to woo the Malays with many concessions.
Incredibly,
he shares the unshakeable belief that the non-Malays are dependent on
him and will never betray him because they say, “Who else is there
besides Anwar?”
Anwar
has bent over backwards to appease the Malays but they still reject
him. At the same time, the non-Malays have also continued to bend over
backwards to “support” Anwar, and yet, he continues to disappoint them.
This is political sado-masochism at work. Sadly, the victim in this power frenzy is the rakyat.
Decades-long rivalry
Those who know the history of Umno and PAS will realise that these three men, Mahathir, Anwar, and Hadi, go a long way.
In the late 1970s, PAS’ domination was on the rise, especially in Mahathir’s home state of Kedah.
Divisional Umno heads warned Mahathir about PAS’ rising threat and urged him to act.
As
Umno deputy chief and deputy prime minister, Mahathir feared that Umno
would lose Malay votes to PAS, which was buoyed by the global Islamic
revival spearheaded by the Iranian revolution of 1979 and the overthrow
of the Iranian monarchy.
Meanwhile, PAS had also accused Umno of not being Islamic enough.
PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang
Mahathir
was displeased with the distraction as he was a man in a hurry to
develop and modernise Malaysia. On top of the Islamic agenda, Mahathir
had another local issue.
Student protests to
highlight the plight of poor farmers and their starving families were an
annoying distraction. Mahathir needed to focus on his vision.
Thus,
he killed two birds with one stone by inviting the charismatic student
leader and co-founder of the Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement (ABIM),
Anwar, to join his government.
As a member of the
establishment, Anwar could no longer lead the student demonstrations,
and with his Islamic credentials, he was a valuable asset to Umno.
Anwar would convince the shallow electorate that Umno was indeed as Islamic as PAS.
He
rolled out policies like the dress code for students and civil
servants, the Bahasa Melayu/Bahasa Bako and the sidelining of non-Malays
in the civil service. Many Malays were duped and the rest is history.
Complacency instead of Reformasi
The
failed bromance of Anwar and Mahathir in the late 1990s and Anwar’s
criticism of Mahathir’s response to the Asian Financial Crisis was
followed by his sacking and subsequent arrest at the height of the
Reformasi movement.
However, Reformasi
had given ordinary Malaysians much hope for a new type of governance
after the dark years of the Mahathir era. Malaysians liked Anwar’s bold
moves for reform and anti-corruption. They vowed to end Umno-Baru rule.
After GE15 and the hastily cobbled coalition government, Malaysians soon became jaded. The promised reforms remain unfulfilled.
Of
course, Malaysians are prepared to give Anwar a chance. It is not as if
he did not have enough preparation time. Didn’t he have a 24-year
apprenticeship?
However, ever since becoming prime minister, there has been poor communication between the top and the grassroots.
With the defeat at Sungai Bakap, Anwar’s ministers and his daughter Nurul Izzah have come out with weasel words like “self-reflection”, “we will listen more”, “bahlol”, and “trust us”.
Haven’t
Malaysians been speaking out about Madani’s failure to listen to the
rakyat all this while? Did it need Sungai Bakap to tell them “We told
you so?”
A complacent Anwar probably thought he could
depend on non-Malay votes to win. He was wrong because in Sungai Bakap,
they wanted to punish him and so they stayed at home.
Perikatan Nasional’s Abidin Ismail (centre) celebrates his win in the Sungai Bakap by-election
A
complacent Anwar probably thought he could cultivate the Malay vote
with various concessions towards them but this strategy failed and, to
make matters worse, he alienated the non-Malays, his core support base.
A
complacent Anwar may claim that the country has benefited from
increased foreign investments but how does this translate to the
ordinary man in the rural and semi-rural areas, whose lives are
shattered by the cost of living crisis?
Disillusionment sets in
Increasing
numbers of middle-class families are also struggling with price
increases in food, fuel and energy, the deteriorating education of their
children, increasing polarisation in the community and the rise in
religious extremism.
They are dissatisfied with the Madani administration.
One
disillusioned PKR supporter said, “Anwar spends more time on Hamas and
he willingly gave them RM100 million. Back home, his own people are
suffering.
“Then, on his return, he’s preoccupied
with enabling house arrest for the convicted felon, Najib Abdul Razak.
He has no time for the rakyat.”
The March to Tanah Melayu Yin, Letters from Ward 5, T.R.
Murray Hunter : Then came Mahathir’s Ketuanan Melayu. ‘Political Islam’ followed.
Now
we don’t even sit in the same kopitiam much less at the same table
anymore – the Malays and the Lain Lain. When we talk, it is superficial
small talk – never about the elephant in the room, never what is in our
heart. We pretend that all is well; that ‘Malaysia is Truly Asia’. Tourists may buy that tag-line but we know better.
In
retrospect, UMNO leaders after Tunku worked against a multi-racial
Malaysia as envisioned in 1957. Their dream was Tanah Melayu, a country
where Malays are the owners and the others “guests” – here at the
pleasure of the host race, with little say in how the country is run.
This dream was shared by leaders of other Malay parties even if their
strategies differed. Each tried to ‘out-Malay’ and ‘out-Islam’ the
other.
The Road to Tanah Melayu
Putting the pieces together one can see a well thought out strategy to achieve Tanah Melayu.
A
good farmer first prepares the soil before he sows his seeds. Likewise
a good politician and Mahathir was a politician par excellence. Malays
were told how they are deprived of the fruits of ‘their own land’ by the
rapacious Chinese and Indian immigrants. Even when offered citizenship
in return for recognising the ‘special position’ of the Malays – a sort
of ‘social contract’ – they broke the agreement. Malays were warned
‘they would disappear like the Red Indians of America’. The idea that
the Chinese and Indians were untrustworthy was planted in the Malay
psyche. The ground ready, the seeds of ‘Tanah Melayu’ was sowed.
Political Spins
1. The most dangerous political spin that has gone largely unchallenged is that the
Malays were generous in allowing the Non-Malays citizenship in 1957 in
exchange for the Non-Malays accepting the ‘special position’ of the
Malays with regard to Article 153 of the Constitution. This
became the imaginary ‘Social Contract’ dredged up by Malay politicians
whenever there was a dispute concerning their “special position” No
documents were presented to support this claim because none exists.
This
‘special position’ refers to the socio-economic situation of the Malays
vis a vis the Non-Malays in 1957. The ‘special privileges’ refers to
the affirmative action policies formulated to lift their socio-economic
level to that of the Chinese and Indians. It is not ‘special privileges’
in the sense of “racial entitlement”, that just because one is a Malay
one is entitled to these ‘special privileges’ in perpetuity. If that
were the case a time limitation clause of 15 years would not have been
written into Article 153. Imagine the Chinese and Indian leaders
condemning future generations of Chinese and Indians to second class
citizenship. This affirmative action ‘special privileges’ was later
extended to “when Malays have 30% of the GDP” – a target set by the
government.
This target was reached by 2015 according to Dr Lim
Teck Ghee which the government denied but would not reveal government
data or its methodology when challenged. It would seem that the
government intend Malay privileges to continue in perpetuity.
The socio-economic environment and demography of the country at that time:
At
independence the “Malays were mainly rice growers and planters of
coconuts and other agricultural produce. They also served in the army,
police and civil service.
The Chinese were the mainstay
of the tin mines, were market-gardeners, artisans, shopkeepers,
contractors, clerks and financiers.
The Indians – beyond
the rubber plantation; Indians were recruited for public works and
railway. They were in the hospitals, police and the bureaucracy.”
The
British were the colonial rulers. They also hold the major share of the
economy – the big plantations and tin mines were British owned. The
major trading houses and agencies were British.
(Total Malays – 3125.5 Total Non-Malays – 3153.3).
At
the time of independence Malays were in the minority (relative to the
rest) even including large numbers of immigrants from Sumatra and Java
especially during the first four decades of the 20th Century who were classified as Malays. In other words, the number of local Malays was even less than as stated above.
Can
you imagine the British not granting citizenship to those Non-Malays
who want it (whether the Malays liked it or not) when the economy
depended on the[I1] m.
Britain was just coming out of WW2 and colonies like Malaya were vital
to the economy of Britain which still had a huge economic stake in
Malaya even after 1957. Britain could not risk its cash cow when money
was needed to rebuild a war-ravaged country.
The British are realists. Without the Chinese and Indians the new nation of Malaya would not have been viable.
If
the Chinese and Indians (who arrived in large numbers about the same
time as the Javanese and Sumatrans in the early 1900s) were granted
citizenship, so were the Sumatrans, Javanese and others who were not
local born. So why the fuss about the Chinese and Indians getting
citizenship?
On a more practical level how could the new country
function without the Chinese and Indians? Malays were averse to the
back-breaking work and risks which the Chinese and Indians were prepared
to undertake. That is why the British brought in the Chinese and
Indians, to work the mines and rubber estates. They also constructed
roads and railways and other infrastructure. They ran small businesses
to service the community. There would not have been independence if this
matter was not resolved because Malaya would not have been functional
as an economy.
The Chinese and Indians are not here because of the
generosity of the Malays; they are here because they served an economic
purpose. They have paid for their citizenship with their blood, sweat
and tears. There is no argument that the towns and infrastructure were
built by them. They have given their lives fighting for the country,
they have sweated to make the country prosperous. They owe no one
anything; they have paid their way many times over . . . and are still
doing! Even today, the minority Malaysians are carrying the majority
according to Mahathir.
Hence acceptance of the ‘special position’
of the Malays by the Non-Malays is not in exchange for citizenship.
Unfortunately, that like Goebel’s lies, told over years this narrative
has taken on the guise of truth.
On the other hand, acceptance of
the Malay ‘special position’ as per Article 153 which conceded to
Malays certain ‘special privileges’ (time-limited) by the Chinese and
Indians was necessary and pragmatic because without it the country would
not work. It is impossible for half the population to be economically
disadvantaged and not expect discontent. The Malays must be lifted up to
the socio-economic level of the others. Article 153 is an ‘affirmative
action’ legislation which the Non-Malays accepted. It is not a
legislation for ‘Malay exclusivity’ which demanded privileges in
perpetuity.
2. Indigeneity
Indigeneity
as a basis for Malay claim to “special privileges” is a false claim.
Fact is Malays are not indigenous to Malaya. They were early settlers on
the land for sure. While ethnic Malays came from Rhiau and Deli in
Sumatera others came from Java and other islands in the archipelago.
What is the difference? except the Chinese came from China and the
Indians from India. We are all immigrants albeit some came earlier. The
real indigenes are the Sengois, Semais, Jakuns, Negritos and other
tribes, that is why they are called Orang Asli. In East Malaysia it
would be the Dayaks, Kadazan-Dusuns, Muruts, Bidayuhs etc.
Also
at the time of Merdeka many “Malays” are not ethnically Malays but
Pakistanis, Indians etc who fit the constitutional definition of ‘Malay’
e.g. Mahathir Mohammed. These ‘celup Malays’ have even less claim to
‘special privileges’.
If the claim of indigeneity is the basis for
‘special privileges’ why are the Orang Asli at the bottom of the
socio-economic heap?
It is worth reminding ourself that the
international convention of citizenship does not allow for “special
position” because of indigeneity. Once acquired, citizenship confers the
same rights and responsibilities on all citizens. There are no
different classes of citizenship based on colour or creed.
In short, the ‘special position’ of the Malays derives from its weaker economic position – not its claim to indigeneity,
Strategies for Tanah Melayu
Irrespective of the above, the purveyors of the dream persisted.
1.
From schools to mosques and government institutions the narrative for
Tanah Melayu was spun. A ‘rewritten’ history skewed to emphasise the
Malay position was taught in schools. The Biro Tata Negara diminished
the contributions of the Non-Malays to nation building while
exaggerating that of Malays. Mosques warned that Christians were out to
convert Muslims. Every measure was taken to remove Christian symbols and
practices, many Arabic words and phrases were forbidden to Non-Malays.
All this in order not to confuse the Malays.
2. Perhaps if
everyone ‘masuk Melayu’ the issue of race (and religion) would be
resolved. To this end the government introduced ‘the Malaysian Culture
Policy 1971’ where only Malay, Islamic and Indigenous Cultures were
recognised as ‘Malaysian’. Indian and Chinese cultures were not allowed
in public. Children were not allowed to perform cultural dances of their
respective race in school performances.
The multi-racial,
multi-cultural Malaysia as envisaged in 1957 would have vanished with
one stroke of the pen except that the Chinese and Indians protested.
Every Chinese Guild and Indian Association, Independent Vernacular
Schools, Cultural Clubs etc rose in unison. MCA, MIC and Gerakan,
subservient junior partners in the BN Government, had no choice but to
speak up for their respective communities. DAP which had been calling
for a Malaysian Malaysia could not resist the opportunity to score
political points.
3. The rejection of the Malaysian Culture
Policy did not blunt the push for Tanah Melayu. If one way failed, try
another way. . . In a master stroke, a Christian majority Sabah became a
Muslim majority state overnight by the issuance of blue identity cards
to illegal immigrant Muslim Filipinos in the thousands.
Sarawak saw what happened and took measures to protect itself from the Malay Islamic invasion.
4.
Article 153 was hijacked by Malay leaders who ignored all provisions to
protect the legitimate interests of the Non-Malays as required in the
legislation. Chinese businesses were forced to close because their
licences were not renewed. In other cases, Chinese businesses were
forced to give up a substantial percentage of their shares to Malays.
Government owned businesses like MAS were virtually given away and
bought back at a loss or bailed out with public funds when they failed.
A Malay mercantile class was created overnight what took the Chinese generations to build.
5.
“Operasi Penuh Isi” an UMNO plan to fill all government positions with
Malays was carried out. Government services were overwhelmingly Malays –
way above their percentage of the population. Today the executive
branch of government and government owned or linked companies are almost
entirely Malay.
With banking, insurance, ports, imports of
essentials, rice milling, energy, the automobile industry in the hands
of Malays. Malays control a huge percentage if not the majority of the
economy. With Malays controlling every lever of government and Malay
making up the overwhelming majority of government employees, the Malay
Agenda cannot fail. Is Ismail Sabri’s declaration of a ‘Malay
Government’ an announcement of the arrival of ‘Tanah Melayu’?
Almost but not quite. Anwar Ibrahim still needed DAP and the other
multi-racial parties in East Malaysia to keep him in power in the Unity
Government against the ambitions of other Malay leaders.
But
Anwar is no less a racial and religious chauvinist. Despite his show of
being a tolerant liberal Malay, his true colours emerge in less guarded
moments. Jakim the department responsible for the development of Islam
has a bigger budget than many ministries which served all sectors. Anwar
has remained conspicuously silent in the face of protests by
Non-Muslims across the country on the illegal conversion of Non-Malay
minors. While he made it clear that under him affirmative action will be
needs based yet rich Malays continue to enjoy special privileges while
poor Non-Malays do not. He promised to help SMEs irrespective of race
yet he did not open APs to Non-Malay companies like he did Malay SMEs.
Anwar
is no less a Malay chauvinist than his former mentor Mahathir or any of
the other Malay leaders. His Islamic credentials carried over from his
ABIM days remain intact.
If the multi-racial Malaya/Malaysia we
signed up for is to survive, the current state of affairs cannot remain
unchallenged. The challenge has to come from all stakeholders - Dayaks,
Kadazan-Dusuns, Muruts – all Sarawakians and Sabahans - the Aslis,
Chinese and Indians of Malaya but especially Malays who believe in and
will fight for the Malaysia our fathers agreed on.
Are we witnessing the end of a dream and the beginning of a nightmare?
If we accept the general perception that Bumiputras refer to the indigenous peoples of Malaysia then it should refer only to the natives of Sabah and Sarawak (Ibans, Kadazans, Muruts, Penans) and the Orang Aslis (Temiars, Smyas, Jakuns and the Proto-Malays) in West Malaysia. Everyone else is an immigrant or ‘pendatang’ (as the Deputy Prime Minister labeled the Chinese and Indians) who came here at different times in our history.
Some came earlier than others, but they came from somewhere else, all the same.
However, UMNO politicians have manipulated it to include the Malays, who were immigrants from Nusantara – Indonesia. I have yet to come across a Proto-Malay or Melayupurba stock person; there are so few of them. Najib has proudly declared that he is Bugis and Khalid said his ancestors came from West Java.
Malays originally came from Indonesia (actually Malays are a minority ethnic group from Riau and Deli in Sumatera. In Malaysia, “Malay” has been used loosely to encompass all who came over from Indonesia be they Minangs, Achenese, Mandalings).
Strictly speaking, they are not Bumiputras in the true sense of the word, they are not the original people of the land. To complicate the definition even more, our constitution defines a Malay as anyone who speaks Malay, follow Malay customs, and is a Muslim – it has nothing to do with ethnicity.
This allowed thousands of Indian Muslims, Pakistanis, and others who fit the definition, to be counted as Malays. Mahathir who is half Malayalee is the most famous of these pseudo-Malays.
But we all accept the 1957 Constitution with all its imperfections – no constitution is perfect – and so the definition of Malay. But that is not the issue; the issue is racial discrimination.
Bumiputraism is a political construct (invented to serve certain political interests); it has nothing to do with recognising the position of the indigenous people and respecting them and bestowing on them the title ‘princes of the earth’– like the First Nation, in Canada or Maoris in New Zealand. It has little to do with indigenity and plenty to do with race politics.
If it is a genuinely indigenous peoples focused policy, why are the aborigines at the bottom of the barrel socially, politically and economically?
It has nothing to do with affirmative action either, which is needs based.
BUMIPUTRAISM IS DIVISIVE.
Usman Awang, the late poet laureate, put it so eloquently in his poem “Sahabatku – My Friend.
“SAHABATKU”
Suatu bangsa merdeka yang kita impikan
Terasa jauh dari kenyataan
Kemarahan ku menjadi kepedihan
Bila kita dipisah-pisahkan
Jarak itu semakin berjauhan
Aku dapat gelaran ‘bumiputra’ dan kau bukan”
MY FRIEND
The one free race we dream of
Seems so distant from reality
My anger turns to sorrow
When they drive a wedge between us
The distance grows
I get the title ‘bumiputra’ and not you.
(Extract from the poem Sahabat ku which Usman Awang dedicated to his friend Dr M.K. Rajakumar).
Despite the government’s claim that it wants to unite the country – from Mahathir’s Bangsar Malaysia to Najib’s 1Malaysia – all they have done is come up with empty slogans; but continue with racially divisive policies.
Bumiputraism divides one set of Malaysians from another – irrespective of economic activities (which the NEP tried to address). It is a “them and us” demarcation based solely on race and religion.It creates a mindset of entitlement in those who have the title and a sense of resentment in those who missed out.
It is the wedge that divides our country.
IT CORRUPTS THE NATIONAL PSYCHE.
Bumiputraism goes deep into our psyche – beyond handouts and privileges.
This racial branding is a psychological stigma and burden on the country while not addressing the problem of wealth disparity. It creates a warped mindset in Malaysians.
A typical example:
“We better put a Malay at the top, otherwise . . . ” Whether this is a sports organization or NGO or whatever. The general perception is, with a Malay at the top it is easier to get things done or to get something from the government or whatever.
And if that person is a Dato or Tan Sri, better still.
“Race” creeps into our thinking in one way or another. It has become part of our national psyche.
It also warps our psyche in another way. It does not matter that a Malay has risen to the top through merit; the perception is “he got there because he is a Malay” not because he is the best. How unfair that is! But can you blame the general perception?
Bumiputraism is a title that is twice cursed. It curses those who have been given it as they are regarded as less capable, their achievements, however legitimate and worthy and entirely due to merit, are questioned; they carry the stigma of people who live on government handouts. Both Mahathir and Badawi have alluded to it as crutches that the Malays have become too dependent on, and now cannot stand on their own feet without them.
It curses those who have not been given the title, because they do not get the help they otherwise deserve, their achievements which they worked so hard for, are often not enough to gain them entry to public universities or even to colleges which are reserved exclusively for Bumiputras. They are often passed over for promotion in government jobs despite their hard work (that is, if they have a government job).
And they do not get the help and incentives for business like Bumiputras do – unless you are an UMNO crony.
They are regarded as second class citizens, and live with that indignity.
So to just remove race-based policies alone(as some politicians want) is not enough, we need to remove the title – to expunge it from our national psyche; and end the “them and us” mentality.
RACIAL DISCRIMINATION IS MORALLY INDEFENSIBLE.
South Africa was an international pariah because of Apartheid. The Australia of the ‘50s – during the time of the “White Australian Policy” was condemned by other more enlightened Western countries and by all Asian countries.
All religions condemn racism because it runs counter to all decent human principles.
The Malaysian Government has condemned Apartheid, Malaysians, including Bumiputras have condemned the racial discrimination is the U.S., the racial/religious discrimination of Western Society. We should look in the mirror first.
Malaysia is peculiar in that we do not have racism per se – the races mix freely – so we invented institutional racism.
There is no segregation like they had in America and South Africa. There are no “for ‘whites only” beaches, or entrance for ‘blacks’ only. By and large, the races mix easily and deal with the daily rough and tumble of a multi-cultural society quite successfully – without government interference.
It is ironic isn’t it?
We have a largely harmonious cultural mix, yet we decide to create an artificial divide.
The only encouraging thing is that it is easier to deal with institutional (political) racial discrimination than it is to deal with a social one. The latter requires a change of hearts and minds through education and long periods of social mixing between the races.
This takes generations.
The former requires just a change of government through the ballot box; replacing it with a more enlightened government that takes care of all Malaysians according to their needs and not skin colour. A government of Malaysians, for Malaysians and not a government for any particular race.
IT IS COUNTERPRODUCTIVE TO A PROGRESSIVE AND PROSPEROUS NATION
No country that is divided along racial lines has ever prospered or remained united.
When you have a system where someone is rewarded not because he is the best, but on the colour of his skin; how efficient can the system be? If we do not put our best people (irrespective of race) to head our government – civil service, police, army, educational establishments, GLCs – are we making the best use of our human resource.
If university entry is based on race, are we producing the best graduates – the workforce that makes us competitive with the rest of the world. If our university chancellors and lecturers are mediocre, so will be our universities and the graduates they churn out.
When once the University of Malaya had a respectable reputation, today it (and other Malaysian universities) languish at a lowly position in the world ranking of universities.
When our smartest and brightest find that opportunities are limited in Malaysia will they not look elsewhere? Frustration at a racial glass ceiling that does not recognise talent, will drive our more ambitious overseas.
This will only benefit (and has benefited) our neighbours and others. Yet our leaders are quite happy to cut off their nose to spite their face.
With globalisation upon us, can we afford to be less competitive? The world does not give two hoots about your racial policies.
One can go on and on about the inequities of a racial system. But ultimately one has to ask; has the end at least justified the means?
IS BUMIPUTRAISM GOOD FOR THE MALAYS (AND MALAYSIA)?
The short answer is NO.
This is not to deny that the Malays have not benefited from the system. Bumiputraism has raised the standard of living of the Malays and brought it to the level of the other races. There is now a large educated Malay middle class, more professionals, a Malay business class, more Malays in urban areas working in government and industry.
That is all well and good, but the way the government went about it is divisive, unnecessary and ultimately detrimental to the Malays – never mind that it has a negative impact on the country as a whole.
The same goal – raising the standard of the Malays – could have been done without resorting to racial policies.
(But then, at the end of the day it is about politics and staying in power – thus UMNO plays the race card).
All this comes with consequences: Graduates who do not meet the requirements of the private sector,and are therefore less employable, a business class which is uncompetitive and too reliant on state help, and a community which is not confident of itself.
Two generations of mollycoddling has held the Malays back. To use a hackneyed cliché . . . give a man fish and you feed him for a day, teach him to fish and you feed him for life. Similarly too much protection and handouts makes a community uncompetitive and dependent.
To make matters worse, when you give him a title, he thinks what he is given is an entitlement instead of a helping hand. And as if it could not get worse, he is led to believe that this is forever.
Fifty years of bumiputraism has ‘softened’ the Malay race. Mahathir himself has said words to the effect that despite having their hands tied behind their backs,the Chinese have done well.
Let me tell you, the Chinese are not supermen, give them a cushy life and they will also become ‘soft’. But because they have only themselves to depend on, they have no choice but to slog or else they don’t eat.
Necessity is not just the mother of invention, it is the mother of resourcefulness, hard work, perseverance and skills. It is a matter of survival.
As they say, “what doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger.”
All this is nothing new. UMNO know it. Yet they persist in such policies because it helps them stay in power – by riding on the fears and dependency of the masses. This is the ‘divide and rule’ principle which has been employed in many different countries – but which finally fail because it has no moral currency and limited efficacy.
WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO THE MALAYS IF BUMIPUTRAISM IS REMOVED?
UMNO and their fellow travellers have from the beginning put out the message that if not for them, the Malays would be in a bad way (and I am putting it mildly. Mahathir actually said something to the effect that they will disappear from the face of the earth). When politicians engage in such racist rhetoric how do you expect the Malays to react? (By the same token MCA and MIC say that if not for them things would be worse for the Chinese and Indians respectively).
These are not words of unity but disunity. It’s divide and rule, pure and simple.
Now that there is a large educated Malay middle class and increasingly more and more young Malays have studied abroad and exposed to liberal democratic ideas, it is not so easy to bamboozle the Malays – the urban Malays (UMNO and PAS voter base is mainly rural).
But rural or urban, Malays should examine the truth of UMNO’s claim. What would happen if Bumiputraism is removed. If affirmative action based on race is ended?
If Bumiputraism is removed without a proper affirmative action policy in its place then it would put a lot of Malays in difficulty.
The majority of Malays still need assistance in one form or another and this should be given. But this assistance should be structured as a “helping hand” and not a “hand-out”. It should be means tested and based on needs. University places should be based on merit (to get the best of the Malays – look here, not everyone is suited for university, be he Malay, Chinese or Indian).
The present system benefits the powerful and politically connected – UMNOputras – disproportionately to the ordinary Malays. This is unfair because it expends increasingly limited resources on those who do not need it, at the expense of those who do.
Why should a rich Malay be entitled to scholarships for his children when he can afford it? Why should a rich Malay be entitled to discounts in house purchases or buying of shares?
Why must monopolies be given to certain people with the result that prices remain high, when open competition would ensure lower prices.This adds to the cost of living of ordinary Malays (and all Malaysians).
A blanket, unbridled race based policy impacts on everyone – especially on the majority Malays.
If Bumiputraism is ended and a proper affirmative action is in place, the main beneficiaries will still be the Malays – only now there should be more going round. However the deserving Indians and Chinese will also benefit. The latter less so because the numbers needing help is relatively small and the Chinese are very resilient, resourceful and self-reliant.
WHAT HAS THE MALAYS GOT TO BE AFRAID OF THE OTHERS?
The Malays control the government, the police, the army, they have ministers in the most important ministries.
The banking system and insurance are controlled by the Malays, a Malay controls the import of rice, sugar and other essential goods.
Petronas is controlled by the Malays. Proton and Perodua are Malay owned. Malays own the franchise of Peugeot, Citroen and so on.
All the GLCs are run by Malays.
What has the Malays got to be afraid of the others? They own the economy and run the country.
APA CINA (DAN ORANG INDIA) MAHU LAGI?
If the non-Malays question their position in the country and criticise the discrimination, they are asked what more do they want. It’s as if whatever they have got has been due to the charity of the Malays.
But that is not how citizenship is supposed to be.
“The right of an indigenous community to exclusive ownership is plainly a transgression of the contemporary concept of citizenship. Citizenship which is conferred upon a person after the fulfillment of certain legal or sometimes cultural requirements entitles him to the same rights and responsibilities as the earlier or original inhabitant of the land.
Once citizenship is acquired no distinction is made.” (Chandra Muzaffar – Chairman Yayasan 1Malaysia)
Does the above then speak for the position of the government, since it comes from the government-appointed chairman of an organization set up to bring about unity in the country.
And by the way, shouldn’t the government ask why after 60 years, the country is still divided? What have they not done right? They can’t keep doing the same thing and expect different results.
The Chinese and Indians cannot run the country, the numbers will tell you that is impossible.
What they want is dignity – to be treated as an equal citizen and not as a second class citizen. They want fair treatment and fair opportunities to pursue their ambitions. They want to be treated just like any other citizen – not asking for special favours or special treatment.
We should not let UMNO or PAS use the Chinese and Indians as bogeys and scapegoats.
We have a great country.
Whenever I read about racial matters, all I need to do is stroll around our one-horse town. This is almost a microcosm of Malaysia – the Malays are the majority, the Indians second and then the Chinese and the Temiars from a village nearby. Malay stalls are set up next to Chinese and Indian stalls. People buy from anyone they like – choosing on quality and price.
People chat with each other – Malays, Indians, Chinese. Indian barbers cut Malay and Chinese hair. Everyone eats at the meegoreng run by a Mamak. Many of the shops employ Temiar women. My own dhobi is Malay run even though there is a Chinese one a stroll away. I go there because I like the person, because his service is good.
And by the way, when I asked him if he got help from the government he just laughed and said he did not have the connections. Our MP is a Malay and no one has a bad word to say about him. He has delivered. People in general don’t care what the colour of the cat is, as long as it catches mice.
And you think people from TR are tigasuku? We are probably more altogether than the lot of you out there.
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Letters from Ward 5, T.R. (A Guest Contributor)
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Footnote: The only encouraging thing in all this, is that it is easier to deal with institutional (political) racial discrimination than it is to deal with a social one. The latter requires a change of hearts and minds through education and long periods of social mixing between the races. This takes time.
The former requires just a change of government through the ballot box; replacing it with a more enlightened government that takes care of all Malaysians according to their needs and not skin colour.
Whatever gains the Malays have made – a large educated middle class, more Malays in the professions, a Malay business class – could have been attained without using racial policies. A genuine, well thought out and implemented affirmative action based on needs, would have delivered the same to the Malays if only because they are the majority. But it would also mean that the deserving among the non-Malayswould not have been neglected.
Ultimately, bumiputraism is not good for the Malays because, instead of encouraging them to perform and supporting them to achieve, we lower the bar for them, which signals to them that they do not have to try harder because, whatever, they will be given a place in a public university or college or special schools reserved only for them.
Instead of having to prove themselves in business they have businesses handed to them on a platter and if it fails, the government will pick up the tab. Where is the drive to succeed when you know that whatever happens to your shipping company or the national airline which has been handed to you, you will be bailed out.
This is not the way produce a resilient and viable bumiputra business class that can compete with the rest.
But the irony of all this is that much of the privileges given to bumiputras do not benefit the Malay masses.
A poor Malay has not got the money to purchase shares, whatever the discount they get.
For that matter most do not understand investing in stocks and shares and in the rural areas there are no facilities for them to trade in or have access to information regarding shares.
Discount for home purchases is fine, but how many houses can an ordinary Malay wage earner buy?
So who benefits the most from all these bumiputra privileges
Certainly not the Malay masses.
Don’t blame non-Malays for Sg Bakap defeat By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
Malaysiakini : Meanwhile, the opposition has cried political persecution whenever
their leaders are targeted by the state security apparatus and have used
social media influencers to highlight not only the hypocrisy of the
Madani state but also the policies that have disenfranchised a young
voting bloc through “surprise” economic policies that still favour the elites.
The
national narrative as defined by the Penang chief minister,“…. the
subsidy, perceived inflation, cost of living, and the burden the people
have to face with all this…” is the local narrative and you can either
believe that these issues do not matter to the non-Malays or that
something more is at play.
Penang Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow
The
fact of the matter is, that DAP has been hamstrung in this coalition
government. The DAP is supposed to be a moderating force but all it has
done is attempt to carry water for the “don’t spook the Malay crowd”
while the Madani government panders to the PN base secure in the belief
that the non-Malays have no choice but to vote for them.
Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli, for instance, said the Harapan coalition had locked down the non-Malay vote.
He
comes off in the press these days sounding like one of those “arrogant
and haughty leaders” Hamzah talked about when Rafizi said that for
Sungai Bakap, PN was a lost cause.
Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli
Rafizi said
on the campaign stump, “It’s very evident that PN has lost direction in
this by-election campaign, as they are not focusing on issues that are
more important to the residents of Sungai Bakap.
“These
are local issues. It is also a testament to the ability and capability
of each candidate to provide the best service to voters here..”
Now,
of course, Rafizi after dissing PN, laments the low turnout of the
non-Malay voters which just goes to show how out of touch the best and
the brightest in PKR really are.
Harapan alienated its supporters
Harapan
has been doing everything in its power to alienate its non-Malay base
and screw over the progressive Malay element in Harapan. Non-Malay
operatives have been bending over backwards attempting to project a
benign face of Chinese influence in Harapan.
Admittedly, Anwar
played the liberal, reformist and progressive Muslim when he was on the
campaign stump and this elevated him to cult-like status amongst the
non-Muslims.
However,
after coming into power, either as a handmaiden to the old maverick or
into his own, his obsession with securing the Malay vote has driven him
and Harapan further right, which has been accepted by the non-Malay
Harapan base but met with indifference by a majority of Malays.
To
be fair to Anwar and his team, beyond the obvious pandering, the prime
minister has been attempting some sort of class dialectic within the
Malay community.
But the problem, as expressed
by some PKR political operatives privately to me and more recently
publicly by the United for the Rights of Malaysians Party (Urimai) pro
tem chairperson P Ramasamy, is the mistake “... of reducing identity
politics to material growth in the form of increased foreign investments
and job creation”.
Of course, the Malay vote is important and
Anwar and Harapan should be chasing it like they would any other vote,
but the fact that the rural Malay vote is unequal makes Anwar’s
pandering to the Malays and their rejection of him even more tragic or
comical, depending on your point of view.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim
He has done everything from overseeing a religious conversion to lecturing a young Indian girl
on the social contract to milking ethnic sacred cows but the majority
community still does not buy what the Madani state is selling.
While
all politics is local, what the federal government should be doing is
ensuring the Harapan base that voted for them (even when they were
losing, but managed to break Umno's two-thirds majority in one of their
defeats) is satisfied with their performance.
Instead, what the
federal government is doing is attempting to replicate BN-style politics
for a base which has no use for it. A base which believed that the
reign of Harapan would move them away from the race-based and
religion-influenced politics of Umno-BN.
Demonisation of DAP
Non-Malay
politicians tell me they have to walk on eggshells when it comes to
certain issues. They tell me the demonisation of DAP seems to be
working. Well, here’s the thing - if people are going to hate DAP, they
are going to do it regardless of whether Malay uber alles coalition is
in power or not.
The narrative that the majority of Malays hate
the DAP has always been around, but the DAP has survived and even
thrived. Instead, what the coalition government does is bend over
backwards attacking the very demographic which could change the
narrative and encourage a new paradigm of mainstream Malaysian politics.
Honestly,
if Anwar carried out the reforms he promised and carried out these
drastic subsidy cuts, voters regardless of ethnicity would be inclined
to give this government a chance.
But the problem is, that Anwar attempts to have a crusade against corruption but has Umno in his pocket.
And
he attempts these drastic subsidy cuts but leakages abound in
organisations under the government’s control and of course, plays the
race and religion card while attempting to court the non-Malay vote.
People who vote for PN know exactly what they are getting and they are
fine with that.
What this government has to understand is which side their bread is buttered.
Can
you imagine that? The top cop of the country tried to convince a
kidnapper to return a child instead of working with the local
authorities in the country this kidnapper was to extricate him and the
child back to the country which laws he had broken.
Indeed, as former Court of Appeals judge Mah Weng Kwai said - “I am baffled
because you have an order of the apex court of this country and the
order was to the police to produce this person, and more so if you know
where he is.
“(But you) don’t produce him and start talking about negotiations. I just don’t understand the reasoning.”
With
all this in mind, if we didn’t second guess how the police were
carrying out the business of the state, it says something about our
reasoning.
We
know that the police knew where he was. We know that the police and
senior politicians were attempting to persuade him to do the right
thing. We know that they obviously failed to convince this kidnapper to
do the right thing.
We know that all this was done under a cloak
of secrecy and that their main objective was not to retrieve a kidnapped
child but rather to find a win-win situation.
We know that years ago the police decided to remain “neutral”
when it came to orders from the civil and syariah courts which - as
rightly pointed out - was complete bunkum by then-Sungkai assemblyperson
A Sivanesan.
“The police are taking the law into their hands...
In this (Indira’s) case, the court order is already there but the police
are not acting on it,” he said.
We
know that the political apparatus chose to remain silent when the IGP
decided to go on his neutral path as then-home minister and current
Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi so elegantly put it - “no comment”.
We
now know that what Hamid told the court - that he wasn’t certain where
the kidnapper was - contradicts his statement about trying to coax
Riduan to do the right thing with the help of senior politicians and
that at least two former prime ministers were aware of his efforts.
Muhammad Riduan Abdullah
Hence
with all this in the public record, can we really believe that there
was no bad faith in the way the police had chosen to carry out its
duties when it came to this kidnapping case?
Mind you, I think
Hamid was sincere (if this makes sense) in trying to achieve some sort
of fair deal for the mother but it wasn’t his duty to make this deal,
only to return a kidnapped child to her mother.
A lost cause?
It would not surprise me if there were enablers, who are average citizens, conspiring to keep this child within Islam.
I
do not think these people consider Riduan as some sort of religious
martyr but rather they believe that Indira’s daughter belongs to them
and their faith.
It pains me to say this but Indira’s daughter
probably has been indoctrinated to believe the narrative of her captors
instead of her mother.
This is what former foreign law enforcement types and cult deprogrammers tell me when I discuss this case with them.
“The
longer the child is with her kidnapper, the child’s situation becomes
normalised and with that, the actions of the child’s kidnapper.”
At
every step of the way, Indira has met nothing but resistance from the
state and a political apparatus, which has used her when convenient and
discarded her cause when in power.
This is really about how this
mother has confronted the state and the state security apparatus through
its various permutations, which enabled the kidnapping of her child.
This is now the Madani state and there is no happy ending for this mother of a kidnapped child.
Everything most Malays are
taught about the Palestinian conflict, they get from National Civics
Bureau (BTN) courses and state-sponsored sermons in mosques.
This is why PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang gets to say something like this - “When Umno and PAS unite, they are accused of wishing to go to war with other races.
“(Our accusers are) like the Jews who did not want Muslims to be united during the Prophet’s time.
“This is a disease we must fight. Let’s join forces and send the enemy to hell.”
PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang
He was alluding to DAP leaders, in case you missed it.
Keep
in mind that Hadi has claimed that he was willing to work with Jews but
not Zionists, which exposes the statement he made about the Umno/PAS
marriage, for the horse manure that it is.
Here in Malaysia, being a Jew and being a Zionist is not mutually exclusive.
Consider
the hate speech of Muslim convert Ridhuan Tee Abdullah, a preacher, who
took anti-Semitism to a new level by comparing his Chinese brothers and
sisters to the most obscene stereotype of Jews, pleading special
knowledge about their community since he was a kafir (infidel) like them before embracing Islam.
Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad claimed that the Jews are “crooks” - “(So) what is the reason we don’t allow Israelites to come here? We say they are crooks (penyangak), and we just got rid of one crook.”
Blackrock business
Former Umno minister Khairy Jamaluddin who has nothing to lose, pontificated about how the cabinet would not endorse this Blackrock deal.
Ex-Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin
But back in the day when he was Umno Youth chief, Khairy was protesting
then-US state secretary Condoleezza Rice and chanting “Israel is a wild
beast. Israel is the devil!” while burning effigies of then-US
president George W Bush.
This idea that spreading hate for the
“Jews” makes good capital is what every Islamic political party in this
country does. Except, of course, when the real world intrudes and
Islamists are made to understand that you cannot expect to be part of
the international community and think you are exempt from certain rules.
The
prime minister said, “We have no means in the current situation to
cancel (ties) because it will impact the country’s economy.”
However,
former PKR stalwart Tian Chua said ”rejecting Blackrock is a moral
imperative. The government must show policy consistency in its stand for
Palestine”.
Mind you, Chua, like the Boycott, Divestment,
Sanctions (BDS) movement, prattles on about ethical choices when it
comes to boycotts hence nobody needs to make the ethical choice of
throwing away their Apple gadget or not fly on Boeing aircraft.
Does it seem to you, like it does to me, that “targeted boycotts” merely mean “convenient” boycotts?
Now
these very same forces that the prime minister encouraged with his
unabashed support for Hamas and claims that he was the target of
powerful interest for his support of the Palestinian issues, have come
home to roost.
The current Umno Youth chief, who seems to be the Teflon kid when it comes to state security apparatus, said: “We fully support
the actions of the government that has expressed strong, undivided
support for the Palestinian people, but we ask for solidarity not only
at the international level, it must be demonstrated in our own country.”
Dr
Muhamad Akmal Saleh has already demonstrated that he really does not
give a fig about the economic consequences of his call for boycotts
hence his stand on this issue is well predictable. This is what happens
when you propagandise a conflict using race and religion.
Optics matter
The
quagmire is that the Malay political establishment is in a bind. Nobody
can come out and support deals with Israeli-linked companies even
though it is an economic plus for this country because this would mean
betraying the Palestinian cause and Muslim solidarity.
Political secretary to the finance minister Muhammad Kamil Abdul Munim said of Khairy - “We are among the most vocal in defending and advocating for the rights of the Palestinians.
“As such, labelling the prime minister as an accomplice of Israel’s genocidal crimes is extreme and disrespectful.”
This, however, misses the point.
This
is a competition about who defends the Palestinian cause better for a
local audience. And in case the prime minister hasn't noticed, he is
playing a rigged game that the state (and him) created decades ago. This
isn’t about the Palestinian people.
When bullying failed, they
managed to convince her superiors to transfer her to a distant location.
That tactic worked, and the stress of being separated from her children
and husband affected her mental health. She resigned.
Malaysia lost a promising young woman in sports nutritional therapy while a neighbouring country has gained from her expertise.
Her
corrupt co-workers are still doing what they do best, undermining the
university they work for. The taxpayers, the students, the budding
athletes and the faculty and university are all victims of these corrupt
civil servants.
The young woman is Malay and to protect her identity, I will name her Ella.
Ella’s
corrupt co-workers have probably done her a favour because she will
pursue her ambition in the neighbouring country, work for higher wages,
and gain more experience than her peers who are still trapped under the tempurung (shell) that she has just abandoned.
Ella
refused to sacrifice her integrity and was unwilling to compromise her
principles. She left her comfort zone and is now better off. She has
struck a working arrangement with her new bosses to enable her to travel
home to see her family every week.
So, if we were to replicate
this corrupt section of the university on a national basis, what would
we find? Is Ella’s situation a one-off problem? Are there more Ellas
throughout Malaysia?
Too much corruption
Even
if we were to jail Ella’s boss for being blind (or dense) to the
corruption going on under his watch, there would not be enough jails in
the country to accommodate all of the corrupt and clueless heads of
departments nationwide.
Last month, Anwar talked about replacing the direct tender process with an open tender system. What happened recently with a certain transport company seemed to contradict what Anwar said about open tenders.
He
said his administration had tackled smuggling syndicates perpetrated by
some civil servants. Part of his anti-graft measures was to deal with
various cartels with roots embedded in the civil service.
However,
corruption is not just about the big organisations or whole
departments, because more often than not, the effects of corruption have
the greatest soul-destroying effect on the ordinary person in the
street.
Corruption restricts growth. It traps the poorest people
in their never-ending cycle of poverty. It stops hardworking and
industrious, determined people from benefitting from what is rightfully
theirs.
Corruption robs both schools and hospitals of vital funds.
People with money can afford clever lawyers and accountants to find
loopholes to avoid paying taxes.
Corruption undermines national security and threatens national harmony.
A ‘cancer’
You may recall the near-riots caused by the drug addict Shahrul Anuar Abdul Aziz who stole a mobile phone
from vendors in Low Yat Plaza in 2015. Shopkeepers were furious that
the police merely stood by and watched the Malay Mat Rempits rampaging
and creating havoc in the shopping complex.
Anwar acknowledged that corruption is like a “cancer”, confirmed that it has been around for decades, and said that it was impossible for department heads not to know what was going on in their departments.
We agree.
However, we would like to know why the laws were not strictly enforced then, why whistleblowers were investigated, and why only opposition MPs were investigated in the anti-graft blitz.
Many whistleblowers lost their jobs. Others who complained about corruption would suddenly find that their contracts had been terminated.
How
will refusing to promote the heads of departments who fail to report
corruption in their department help in the fight against graft?
Some
of us have a problem. It is difficult to take Anwar seriously when he
stands shoulder to shoulder with allegedly corrupt politicians with whom
he has been forced to join forces, to form his coalition government.
Something like local elections
will do far more to improve and recalibrate the education system in
terms of engaging residents, especially the Malay community, rather than
policies that come from Putrajaya.
Activist and ex-MP Kua Kia
Soong alluded to this when he was advocating for local council elections
in 2018 that Pakatan Harapan had abandoned.
Activist and ex-MP Kua Kia Soong
He wrote,
“I have often stressed the fact that an elected local government can,
at a stroke, depoliticise education in Malaysia simply by building
schools based on the need of the local communities – and not have the
Education Ministry treat schools as a political football during general
elections.
“Few
Malaysians have noticed, for example, that the all-important role of
local education authorities in the Education Act 1961 is no longer
mentioned in the Education Act 1996.
“Local education authorities
serve to allocate funds and other facilities to needy sectors, and can
serve to dissipate politicisation of education.”
Dominance of the elite
And,
forget about the urban-educated opposition politics. When politicians
talk of rural folk, you have to understand that these are rural folk by
design.
While rich- and middle-income Malays ensure that their
children receive an education that would make them competitive in this
fast-changing geopolitical landscape, the system is designed to keep
“rural” Malays and working-class Malays bereft of the opportunities
available to that class of Malays who control or who serve in a
political system that enables their privilege.
When those Malays
in that survey said Malays must work hard and be proactive, what exactly
is that an indictment of? It was not of the Malay community but rather
the policies and ideologies of the mainstream Malay political elites.
The
question we should be asking is what is causing this apathy in a large
segment of the Malay community? Why is it that Malay students are not
interested in math and science? Why are families not supportive of the
educational goals of their children?
Anecdotally,
lower-income Malays who I have spoken to over the decades tell me the
reason why some of them do not place much emphasis on education is
because they are from large families and children are encouraged to
quickly become wage earners to support the family.
Furthermore,
the emphasis is on starting a family at a young age, which also hampers
the education process. Keep in mind that Malay women still make up the
majority in public universities so there are many variables to this
issue.
A permanently underprivileged base
When it comes to education, in the ketuanan
(supremacy) system, it is more about class than race. Mainstream
Malaysian politics is predicated on sustaining a jingoistic,
nationalist, but permanently underprivileged Malay base.
Of
course, the kind of class that this system of education engineers makes
them perfect as petty, mid-level bureaucrats or working-class drones,
steeped in religious and racial grievances, using the system at the
behest of their political masters, always hoping to jump to the next
level using corrupt means.
A new serf class was created post-May 1969.
You
can have a world-class education system, however you choose to define
it, but if the target audience is not interested, then you have bupkis.
All policies from successive governments are based on fear and loathing.
The
fear instilled in the Malay majority that their rights would be usurped
by egalitarian and progressive concepts, and loathing by the political
elites that those same concepts are needed to ensure a viable and
economically successful community.
What political elites fail to
understand is that apathy often leads to resentment stoked by religious
fires and then eventually violence.
This is a lesson that political elites all over the world have learnt too late.
The affirmative action policies after the May 13 riots unfairly treated many non-Malay teachers and lecturers.
They
were sidelined for promotion. Non-Malay teaching staff at Mara colleges
and universities were dropped. Some left and sought work overseas,
while others taught until retirement or resigned and set up private
tuition centres.
Back then, teaching was a respected, noble
profession and one chose it because one cared for the children’s future
and to contribute towards nation-building.
Today, our universities
churn out thousands of graduates some of whom take up teaching only as a
last resort. They failed to qualify for other disciplines and teaching
was preferential to unemployment.
When
the British left Malaya, many Malaysians could speak English well. We
were the envy of Southeast Asia, possibly even the envy of Asia. At
universities abroad, our graduates were highly respected.
Soon after Merdeka, the Umno/BN administration politicised education and language became a very sensitive subject.
Promoting
Bahasa Malaysia was a vote winner with the Malay electorate and selfish
politicians were prepared to sacrifice our children's futures to
prolong their political careers.
In the 1970s, Tan Chee Khoon,
one of the founders of the Gerakan party, predicted the threat posed by
nationalists who opposed the use of the English language.
His prophecy has come true, and today, we reap the results.
In the 1970s, many gullible Malay parents believed in the propaganda of linking speaking English with patriotism.
Although
the decline in English proficiency cannot be attributed to one single
factor, the government’s affirmative action policy is perhaps a major
contributor.
The irony is that today, many Malays cry discrimination and complain about the difficulty of getting jobs in the private sector, or with multinational companies.
Dr Mahathir Mohamad dumbed down our education system in favour of affirmative action policies.
Muted voices
The decline began in the seventies.
Most of the former ministers like Razaleigh Hamzah, Musa Hitam, Rafidah, Anwar, Muhyiddin Yassin
and the older politicians will have foreseen the destruction which
Mahathir unleashed on Malaysians. Where were their voices then?
Why
didn’t senior civil servants and university heads speak out too? Today,
many of them are vocal about the decline in English. Yesterday, they
were mute.
Why didn’t prominent, influential Malaysians in
banking, business, and industry alert the then-PM and his cabinet? What
stopped them?
All of them were too busy climbing the greasy social and political ladder to reap the benefits/riches in post-Merdeka Malaysia.
They
are part of the problem and when one reads about their lengthy
suggestions in various WhatsApp groups, it is difficult to contain one’s
cynicism.
They were in power and could have done something about
it, but many preferred to protect their rice bowl. Today, we observe the
destruction caused by their apathy.
The affirmative action
policies damaged our education system. Pass marks were lowered. Limited
scholarships for non-Malays. Introduction of racial quotas.
Meritocracy
ignored. Speaking English is considered unpatriotic. Flip-flopping
between English and Malay for teaching Science and Mathematics. Poor
quality teachers.
Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek has made a mess of the Dual Learning Programme. Elite schools can ignore her latest DLP updates, but other schools must strictly abide by her rules.
If you want to destroy a nation, just tinker with the education system. It’s like watching a car crash in slow motion.
The Global Human Rights Federation (GHRF) president S Shashi said his organisation will not be making a police report against Firdaus because nothing has come of it every time they do.
What
do you think Firdaus thinks of all the police reports lodged against
him and others of his ilk? Firdaus knows he is untouchable when it comes
to the religion of the state.
When
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim presided over the conversion of a young
man, this signalled to the religious bureaucracy and its emissaries that
in-your-face proselytisation was acceptable no matter the tense
religious and racial climate this country was experiencing.
We live in a country where non-Muslims are banned from using certain words, we live in a country where there are cases of non-Muslim children being unilaterally converted and kidnapped, we live in a country where non-Muslims are warned not to disturb Muslim rights when advocating their democratic rights and social justice.
We live in a country where non-Muslim economic endeavours are curtailed because of Muslim piety, we live in a country where in some states, non-Muslim places of worship are subject to restrictions on who can enter.
We live in a country where celebrity preachers mock non-Muslim religions, we live in a country where non-Muslims are often demonised and used as scapegoats by political operatives and political elites, we live in a country where non-Muslims are told that we are not citizens but rather pendatang.
So,
when Anwar presided over the conversion of that Hindu youth, he was
representing the religious reality that non-Muslims face in this
country. He was not merely welcoming a new convert into the religion, he
was reinforcing religious narratives.
The terrifying reality
Now,
Firdaus understands this reality. I would argue that he benefits from
it. However, do the minors he enables and advises to deceive their
families understand this reality?
As I said, religious
experimentation in minors is expected but when it comes to the Malaysian
context religious experimentation comes with severe consequences.
And
I do not mean solely when it comes to non-Muslim minors. Indeed, so
terrified of any kind of possible conversion or undue influence, the
state authorities monitor the social landscape in case Muslims are
influenced by other religions.
This is what the Selangor Islamic Council (Mais) chairperson said when he proclaimed it was unlawful for Muslims to visit non-Muslim places of worship to learn about other religions:
“Although
the objective of this programme is said to give exposure towards a
religion (sic) practised in this country and to form close unity among
the believers of different religions, programmes to learn about other
religions other than Islam in any churches or any houses of worship
needs certain controls and restrictions to ensure there is no element of
persuading Muslims to be influenced and interested in other religions
besides Islam and also no involvement of Muslims in other religions’
rituals.”
With all this in mind, we really must ask ourselves, does the Madani state condone what Firdaus does?
If there are no repercussions, then we know the answer.
With many teachers
creating headlines for the wrong reasons, parents of school-going
children must dread the daily six hours of lessons, when they hope their
children have not been physically, mentally or sexually abused, by of
all people, the teacher.
So, how did Mogahana’s son end up standing in the middle of a field, under the hot sun for close to three hours?
We are also told he is often targeted by school bullies. How did the school resolve this?
Having
complained to his teacher about another pupil throwing a water bottle
at him, he and three others, but not the boy who’d thrown the bottle,
were then told to stand under the hot sun as punishment.
Worse was
to follow. The three boys who were punished alongside Mogahana’s son
were told to return to their classrooms after 10 minutes, but not him.
Despite complaining of dizziness, the torture continued.
Mogahana’s
son appears to have elicited the sadistic streak in his teacher because
what the teacher did that day was unconscionable.
He caused the boy to have life-changing injuries. He cannot claim that he’d forgotten about the boy.
The teacher is criminally negligent.
If
the teacher had followed the official approved mode of punishment, then
the headmaster, the school, the education department and the Education
Ministry are also culpable.
Mogahana’s son returned home feeling
unwell after his ordeal. He felt dizzy, had red eyes and when rushed to
hospital, had fainted at the emergency entrance.
Brainless
Doctors
who examined him said he had heatstroke and had developed a nerve
condition. The Ampang Hospital then designated him as a “person with
disabilities” and advised his parents to register him with the social
welfare department for a “disability” card.
The
most gut-wrenching thing must have been when the parents were told that
their young son would not be able to return to a normal school.
Only a brainless person would allow a young child to stand in the scorching sun for hours. Can the teacher really be that dense?
Young children,
babies, the ill, and elderly people are most at risk in the hot sun.
Children left in locked cars are found lifeless by their parents, who on
their return a few hours later, then wonder why their children had
died.
The spotlight is on the teacher, the school head, the other teachers and the school administration staff.
Did the teacher strictly follow the school rule book, or as Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek calls it, the “Student Management Guidelines”, for the appropriate punishment?
Was
“standing under the scorching sun” an approved method of punishment
which is sanctioned by the Education Department and the ministry?
Or
is this mode of punishing students one that is not in the guidelines,
but has nevertheless been done for many years and has come to be
accepted as the norm?
If a punishment is not listed, why not? Why did the head not convey this to the Education Department?
Most schools have a disciplinary teacher. Was this teacher the one who disciplines misbehaving pupils?
Couldn’t care less
The
sight of a young boy standing in the middle of the field, under a
blazing sun for at least three hours should have aroused someone’s
curiosity.
Incredibly, the other teachers, the school
administrators, and the head did not think it strange to see a young boy
standing on the field.
Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek
This apathetic, tidak-apa (couldn’t care less) behaviour says a lot about the culture and work ethics of the school’s teaching and administration staff.
The lawyer representing the boy’s family has alleged that a witness has been threatened, that the investigation is conducted at a snail’s pace and that the teacher responsible has not been suspended.
Fadhlina
said there would be no compromise over the safety of students and that
appropriate action would be taken based on the investigation report.
Haven’t
we heard her lip service before? Fadhlina must do more to ensure that
our schools do not become every parent’s nightmare.