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No Atheists
In A Foxhole

Rudyard Kipling

" ā€œWhen 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 soldierā€
General Douglas MacArthur

" ā€œWe are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.ā€

ā€œIt is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.ā€
ā€œOld soldiers never die; they just fade away.
ā€œThe soldier, above all other people, prays for peace,
for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.ā€
ā€œMay God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .ā€
ā€œThe object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.

ā€œNobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
ā€œIt 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."

Proud To Have
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Major D Swami
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KKB polls: It doesnā€™t matter if PSM or Muda loses By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Thursday, April 25, 2024

Malaysiakini : Having said that, PSM would benefit from having an urban-based party like Muda bridging the gap between outlier and mainstream politics.

Muda has demonstrated that, for a young party, it has garnered a percentage of votes that PSM never managed to do. Their messaging, especially using social media, does seem to resonate.

PSM could benefit from the kind of exposure that Muda offers, using social media to highlight issues that PSM has been attempting to garner support for.

Beyond establishment parties

I detest not voting since in a democracy it is the least a citizen can do. But in this instance, boycotting is an option because voting for the establishment coalitions means more or less voting for the enabling of a theocratic state.

PSM and Muda must contest in the Kuala Kubu Baharu polls, even if it means their candidates lose their deposit. Why? Because there is a certain section of the polity that needs options beyond establishment parties and their failed policies and broken promises.

While PSM and Muda may get protest votes and I sincerely hope they do, what fielding a candidate does is to specifically wean the non-Malay polity off the addiction to voting for a political party and coalition that is slowly but surely dismantling the secular and constitutional framework of this country.

An example of this would be the recent comments by Minister in the Prime Ministerā€™s Department (Religious Affairs) Mohd Naā€™im Mokhtar on the progress of Act 355, which would have serious consequences for the fading secular nature of this country.

If you really support change, then you must come to the realisation that alternatives to mainstream political parties are a vital part of that change.

However, if you think that they are just a distraction, then go on supporting political groups that have no incentive to genuinely carry out the reforms that Malaysia desperately needs. They assume they have your vote against a far-right coalition that unfortunately shapes how the coalition government thinks and ultimately the direction of this country.

People have to remember this. If PSM and Muda field a candidate, they would have done their part in the democratic process. If they lose, it would mean that a significant section of the voting polity is still not ready to do its part in safeguarding the secular and constitutional framework of this country.

Win or lose, this is the beautiful struggle.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 5:19 PM   0 comments
How much more must we bend for Najib? By P Gunasegaram
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Malaysiakini : Itā€™s bad enough that the Pardons Board halved his jail sentence and reduced that RM210 million fine to a mere RM50 million, now Zahid has sworn an affidavit saying that the king consented to his house arrest in an addendum. However, that was not what the Pardons Board had decided.

Anwarā€™s reaction to this has been nothing less than pathetic, saying that he does not want to be dragged in and refusing to comment on whether he knew about the addendum.

Worse, he said, ā€œThe federal government will not question the authority of the former Yang di-Pertuan Agong to decide on former prime minister Najib Abdul Razakā€™s house detention.

ā€œOur position is clear that any decision made in the Pardons Board, the Agongā€™s decision, is final,ā€ he said according to this article, Najib house arrest: Anwar says govt respects Agongā€™s discretion.

But has the Pardonā€™s Board not made the final decision, which is the reduction of the sentence and fine? Najib is already serving that sentence.

No provision for house arrest

As it is, there is no provision in the legal system for house arrest, according to this article. The best thing to do is to keep the decision of the Pardonā€™s Board final instead of introducing unprecedented arrangements to bend and even break the legal system.

Anwar further said, ā€œEver since Merdeka until today, there has been no action by the government that goes against the role and power of the Malay rulers, and this we must keep. Those who canā€™t understand the decision, they are not fit to be a political commentator.ā€

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim

Thatā€™s a politically charged comment. I apologise for being an unfit commentator in Anwarā€™s eyes at least and there are others like me, but this is by no means the final legal opinion. As in many other situations, the king acts under advice.

Not all lawyers agree with Anwar. Here is an article by lawyer GK Ganeson titled ā€œIs the Kingā€™s power to grant a pardon, ā€˜personalā€™ and ā€˜absoluteā€™?ā€ that says the power to grant pardons by the king is not absolute.

Anwarā€™s response has raised more questions than answers. It looks like the disturbing direction that the government is headed as far as this is concerned, is house arrest for Najib, because ā€œthe federal government will not question the authority of the former Yang di-Pertuan Agongā€.

He has already indicated which way he leans with regard to questions of law. However, the question he will be asked is whether he is leaning in this direction to satisfy Umnoā€™s demands and not because the law says so. If he is, and it looks like he is, he is driving a political nail into PKRā€™s coffin.

When PKR unequivocally won the election of May 2018, the main rallying point for this was the billions of ringgit lost by the country, estimated at US$7 billion (a massive RM33 billion) by no less than the auditor-general in 2016, which report was suppressed by Najib.

And there were a multitude of allegations against other Umno leaders. In fact, it was reported at various times that many Umno divisions received money from Najib in the millions of ringgit. 1MDB was the final nail in the coffin for Umno, now desperate for a revival of their fortunes, ironically through a pardon for Najib.

Harapan could drown along with Umno

Whatā€™s dangerous is that Anwar appears to have bought into this fallacious argument pushed hard by Zahid and his Umno cronies. PKR and Harapan are now tethered to Umno over this issue. In the sea of outrage and scorn that will pour over the political landscape following Najibā€™s undeserved pardon and release, they will drown along with Umno.

Najibā€™s pardon and release will result in Perikatan Nasional - that coalition between PAS and Bersatu - winning the next general election. It was repeated corruption that resulted in dwindling support for Umno and it will result in a fatal loss for Harapan as well from which it will not recover.

Look at the track record of Umno under Najib. In 2013, he garnered 88 parliamentary seats for Umno. In 2018, when 1MDB was all the news and the public realised that Najib was a thief, it dived some four-tenths to 54 seats. He lost the elections, the first time ever for Umno.

Under his crony, Zahid, it declined further by a disastrous more than half to 26 in 2022, making it all but irrelevant. Zahid also campaigned on the platform of getting a pardon for Najib, which really backfired. Now Harapan has set itself up to go under together with Umno.

Just look at the extent to which the system has bent over for Najib. On July 4, 2018, just under two months after the Harapan government came into power, he was charged with offences of corruption, abuse of power and money laundering involving RM42 million.

After a long exhausting trial, dramatic appeal processes and rearguard delay tactics, Najib was finally, after four years, told to begin his sentence of 12 years in jail and a fine of RM210 million on August 23, 2022, when Ismail Sabri Yaakob from Umno was prime minister.

He has not even served two years in jail and his sentence has been halved through the pardon process and his fine reduced to RM50 million. Typically a person serves at least half of his sentence even before a pardon is entertained.

Najib has expressed no remorse for his actions, maintains he is a political victim and many allegations were made against the judge who convicted him and against the entire judicial system itself. However, no action has been taken against anyone for such blatant, unwarranted and unprecedented attacks on the judiciary.

All this effort is for a person who is facing multiple other charges. There are three other pending high-profile court cases against Najib, which include 25 charges involving RM2.3 billion, six criminal breach-of-trust cases involving RM6.6 billion and money laundering involving RM27 million.

In addition, Najib faces a colossal US$1.18 billion (RM5.5 billion) civil suit against him from SRC International, another government corporation.

What deterrence against corruption can there be?

In the wake of all of this, there is the unbelievable current move now about house arrest for a convicted felon who faces many other charges and is responsible for the greatest theft in the world at the time it was committed.

Coincidentally, of course, this comes at a time when the government, in its sudden unbidden compassion for prisoners, is thinking of allowing them to serve their last four years of sentence at home. Come August, Najib would have served two years of his halved six-year sentence, leaving four years remaining.

Talk about bending over backwards! Is it any wonder why the ringgit continues to decline? Itā€™s partly because stretching the law to breaking point calls into question the very principle of crime and its attendant punishments with the looming prospect of a major criminal serving time at his home. Would anyone have respect for our legal system after this?

Najib has injured this country for far too long and far too much. The best thing to do is to put him away for a long time - legally of course - so that others wonā€™t follow his lousy example.

What deterrence against corruption can there be when the most corrupt person the country has ever produced gets away with a rap on the knuckles, whiling away his time in the luxury of his own home?

Those who do not understand this are unfit to be political leaders. It's not a matter of whether he can be pardoned, it's whether he should be. The answer is as clear as crystal.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:28 PM   0 comments
Kuala Kubu Baharu by-election: Protest vote or boycott? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 22, 2024

Malaysiakini : Meanwhile, Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming announced that the government plans to allocate RM5.21 million to upgrade public infrastructure facilities under the supervision of the Hulu Selangor Municipal Council (MPHS) and the Chinese New Village Project in Kuala Kubu Baharu.

I guess targeted voter strategies are perfectly Bangsa Malaysian but only for a specific ethnic group.

Never mind that when BN pulled this horse manure back in the day and when Bersih and other pressure groups raised a hue and cry, Harapan jumped on the bandwagon. But now, of course, Harapan and its supporters contort themselves attempting to justify such strategies and vilifying the pressure groups they once supported.

This is the problem with this unity government. What it has effectively managed to do is neutralise government watchdogs which would make them even more ineffective when this country reaches theocratic status.

This by-election is the perfect example of why we desperately need third-party candidates. For decades, what the legacy parties have done, as they do all over the world, is demonise and isolate third-party candidates. Partisan politics demands allegiance which should be unquestioning.

Voter anger and apathy

This is not really an ā€œIndian issueā€. The Indians in Kuala Kubu Baharu are just being used by political operatives to further whatever agendas they think best serve the Indian community but in reality, just serve themselves.

The focus should be that this Harapan government is squandering the opportunity for reform and that the establishment parties are merely attempting to replicate strategies that have failed this country.

In politics, anger is something that can be dealt with, with the appropriate realignment of policy and agenda. What is worse, and which could eventually destroy Harapan, is apathy. This is the real danger facing Harapan.

What some folks are pissed off at is how the Harapan government is not only sliding back into BN-era practices but the people who want reform are made to look as if they are the problem.

Harapan is always blaming the past government for every single thing going wrong in this country while colluding with the forces that are bringing this country to its knees. Harapanā€™s problems are self-inflicted.

How do voters exercise their democratic rights when all available options are detrimental to the country? How do voters hold their elected representatives accountable?

You see DAP becoming the running dog it accused MCA of being and you understand that if you are non-Malay, your vote means very little to the coalition you support because they are too busy fulfilling the expectations of those who did not vote for them.

You get sick and tired of going on social media and reading anonymous partisan trolls who mock and vilify those who are trying to get Harapan to do the right thing. You are disgusted by rather dumb excuses like ā€œRome wasnā€™t built in a dayā€ when the house of cards is slowly tumbling down.

You fear that your vote would eventually be the path to a theocracy because you assumed that the party you voted for would be the bulwark against such an encroachment.

You are worried that Harapan is taking you for granted. Harapan political operatives will smugly assume that, especially if you are non-Malay, you do not have a choice.

Unpalatable options

Once the base starts realising that a change in a government does not mean a change in policy, people will stop participating in the process. What are people dissatisfied with Harapan regardless of their ethnicity supposed to do?

I sincerely hope there will be third-party candidates in this by-election and not just candidates who are proxies for the establishment.

But what if there are no independent candidates to vote for and the choice is between PN and Harapan? Then you have to make a choice of voting for PN or staying at home to make a point to Harapan.

Both are unpalatable options because one is a continuation of the transgressive religious policies that a certain section of the polity is resisting while the other merely doubles the voting power of those supporting PN.

Maybe this is the real lesson, that in a democracy, the rakyat need genuine options and it is the agenda of mainstream parties to limit those options.

A point still needs to be made though.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 4:30 PM   0 comments
PM's ex-aide Farhash is the new political crony By P Gunasegaram
Thursday, April 18, 2024

Malaysiakini : Last year, Farhash claimed to have given up politics. At 41 and without much going by the way of relevant experience, not only has he become executive chairperson of two listed companies, he is the chairperson of another and a substantial shareholder of listed tech provider HeiTech Padu, which recently secured an RM190 million contract and is tipped to secure a further RM1 billion one.

What is significant is that Farhash was Anwarā€™s political secretary before he ostensibly quit politics in favour of business. But quitting politics seems to have opened wide other doors for him.

Anwar Ibrahim speaking at a press conference during the 15th general electionā€™s campaign period on Oct 27, 2022, accompanied by his then political secretary Farhash Wafa Salvador Rizal Mubarak (left).

Connecting the dots

He has charted an unbelievably meteoric rise in his corporate career in a short few months, coinciding remarkably with Anwarā€™s ascension to the post of prime minister in November 2022. It is interesting to track his rapid ascent up the corporate ladder.

On Dec 27, 2022, he became the executive chairperson of Apex Equity Holdings Bhd, a troubled previously family-owned stock-broking company where there is a shareholder feud going on. Read about the problems here.

That should have legitimately raised eyebrows - what was a 41-year-old doing as executive chairperson of this group? This is what Apex had to say about him:

ā€œFarhash brings with him more than a decadeā€™s worth of experience in the field of business, consultancy, and advisory. On the business front, his illustrious career spans a broad range of sectors which includes construction, technology, hotel, food & beverage.

ā€œFarhash is or has been a director and/or shareholder in at least ten private companies which include Swag Technologies Sdn Bhd, Salvador & Sons Sdn Bhd, and Pacific Samudera Sdn Bhd. He was also an independent non-executive director of Blumont Group Limited (now known as Southern Archipelago Limited) from 2014 to 2016, a public-listed company listed on the Mainboard of the Singapore Exchange (SGX).ā€

There is no mention of any executive position anywhere that would justify parachuting him to the top executive position in Apex Equity. Incidentally, Blumont shares were pushed up in 2013 as part of a massive share manipulation exercise in 2013. Read about it here.

And then, days later on Jan 3, 2023, he was appointed non-independent, non-executive chairperson of convenience stores operator 7-Eleven Malaysia Bhd, a wholly owned subsidiary of B-Retail. The Berjaya group is controlled by businessperson Vincent Tan.

Vincent Tan

According to news reports, Berjaya founder Vincent filed a lawsuit in July last year against the Finance Ministry and Spanco Sdn Bhd regarding the termination of a letter of intent, alleging that the contract was awarded to Spanco despite their higher bid. Tan questioned why the government had agreed to pay RM700 million more to Spanco.

On April 3 this year, Spanco executive director Robert Tan Hua Soon was charged with cheating the government over a contract worth over RM3.9 billion by convincing the Finance Ministry that Spanco had at least 30 percent bumiputera shareholding.

Robert, a close associate of former finance minister Daim Zainuddin, pleaded not guilty. Daim headed the powerful Council of Eminent Persons formed by Dr Mahathir Mohamad during his second term as prime minister from 2018 to 2020 when the new contract was awarded to Spanco.

Anwar has said that those in previous positions of power would be investigated for corruption. Daim had been charged in court on Jan 29 this year with failing to comply with a MACC notice to declare his assets.

Former finance minister Daim Zainuddin

The sequence of events has led observers to believe that there is closeness between Anwar and Vincent, reflected through Farhashā€™s appointment at 7-Eleven.

On May 9 last year, Farhash became executive chairperson of Excel Force MSC Bhd, another listed company. He was now in the unusual position of being executive chairperson of two separate unlinked companies listed on Bursa Malaysia. That could be a first. How was he going to manage his time?

Contracts galore

On March 11, HeiTech Padu announced that it had obtained an extension of a contract with the Immigration Department for a year from Feb 18 for RM13.1 million.

On the same day, listed MyEG Services Bhd acquired a 14.4 percent interest in HeiTech Padu through a subsidiary.

On March 14, three days later, Farhash became a major shareholder of HeiTech Padu with a 15.91 percent stake. He later clarified that he shared ownership of the shareholding in the company, held via private vehicle Rosetta Partners Sdn Bhd, with Kelantanā€™s Sultan Muhammad V.

The big announcement came on April 15 - HeiTech Padu had obtained an RM190 million contract from the Road Transport Department (RTD) for three years from May.

The contract is for the maintenance and technical support for ICT Infrastructure including the vehicle and driver information system at the data centre and RTD offices.

HeiTech Padu is now said to be the frontrunner for a new Immigration Department contract which could be valued at RM1 billion.

On April 16, a day after the announcement of the RM190 million contract, HeiTech Padu announced a teaming agreement with MyEG ā€œto form an interim collaboration to explore services in relation to the information technology industry in Malaysia.ā€

The three companies mentioned in this article - HeiTech Padu, Excel Force, and MyEG - are linked by a complicated web of shareholdings and directors. They are in similar businesses and appear involved in getting government contracts and splitting them among themselves.

Whatā€™s clear from all this is that a new political crony - Farhash - is on the scene. The disturbing question: Is this new unity government led by PKR operating no differently from Umno and Bersatu in the award of contracts?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:45 PM   0 comments
Just give every less fortunate, deserving Indian child scholarship By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy

Malaysiakini : And why do you think that these young Indian students speak up about the quota system and the uneven playing field of the educational system? Because they understand that their parents cannot articulate their grievances due to the lack of skill sets that social mobility brings, more often than not.

All are responsible

Indians cannot rely on political parties to represent them. Whatever promises are made to the Indian community do not mean much. How, exactly, if the community is not a significant voting bloc, will those who break promises be held accountable?

Here is a short polemical view of the MIC. The MIC, or CashMoneyBrothers as I like to refer to them (to understand this reference, readers are encouraged to watch the great Wesley Snipes movie, ā€œNew Jack Cityā€), played a major role in the dismal situation of the Indian community but the reality is, Indians themselves are also to blame for their misfortune.

Voting members of the Indian community (generally poor and disenfranchised) voted for the MIC and BN believing the propaganda that they spewed because the reality for them was much worse. Better to vote in hope than not at all.

Meanwhile, the bourgeois class either abstained from voting out of disinterest in the thug politics of the MIC or general apathy towards the political process.

This, of course, did not preclude them from embracing indulgent Indian ā€œculturalā€ societies or attending glittery Indian society events, both of which had the grubby handprints of the MIC.

What Hindraf managed to do - and did really well - was to wake up an apathetic Indian middle class to the plight of their less fortunate brethren.

How exactly does a community improve when its political leadership, either establishment or opposition, are constantly telling them that they are there because the votes of the Malay and Chinese effectively advocate on behalf of their community?

Politicians understand the problem butā€¦

This is not to say that mainstream political parties like the DAP have not had Indian political operatives who understood the problem. Here is then Klang MP Charles Santiago in 2017 when another prime minister was throwing breadcrumbs at the underprivileged Indian community.

ā€œIn fact, (then prime minister) Najibā€™s (Abdul Razak) instructions came after a ribbing by MIC president Dr S Subramaniam, who brought up the issue of 745 eligible Indian students who were unable to get places in public tertiary education institutions.

ā€œIf I may ask, why werenā€™t they given a spot in the first place? Why do politicians and the prime minister have to interfere, if the system offered places based on meritocracy and not other considerations, such as race and religion? Vulnerable students from all communities should be given priority and not offered places as an afterthought.ā€

I canā€™t remember what happened to Santiago. Oh, that is right. He was canned but given a really good parting gift. Mind you, I am not saying that Santiago would not do a good job but this is politics and everyone eventually gets touched.

Former Klang MP Charles Santiago

This is why when I hear that someone like former Penang deputy chief minister P Ramasamy, who should and does know better than to attempt to start another party to champion the Indian cause, I just shake my head because it is another cynical attempt to manipulate a volatile class of people into voting (letā€™s face facts) against their self-interests.

I mean, start with this. Start small. All that money thrown at various alleviation programmes for Indians could be funnelled into something like an education project.

There are enough NGOs and pressure groups representing the underprivileged of the Indian community who could point to students who desperately need help either in the public or vernacular school education system. Just start there and build on that.

Iā€™ll end with another BR Ambedkar quote - ā€œEquality may be a fiction but nonetheless one must accept it as a governing principle.ā€

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 1:56 PM   0 comments
Anwar needs to put inclusivity into practice By P Gunasegaram
Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Malaysiakini : ā€œIf Malaysia wants to survive, we must go back to the core values and principles of humanity, justice and unity because that can ensure our successā€¦ and not to pander to the racist agenda of various quarters,ā€ he said.

However, to be taken seriously, Anwar needs to break the reputation he has earned by saying different things to different audiences but not doing anything for them in the end.

He needs to show by deed and action that he means it.

Unfortunately, after one and a half years as PM - a position he got to after many trials and tribulations, doubts and misgivings, a quarter of a century of discord and strife, and the unwavering support and help of many Malaysians - Anwar has yet to prove that he is serious about what he wants to do.

Letā€™s take two issues - eradication of poverty irrespective of race and the fight against corruption.

Unfortunately, a serious discussion of both brings up the issue of Umno Baru, the most racist party in all of Malaysia and also the most corrupt. Anwar is too much in league with them to do anything serious about this so far.

Who is the one who is currently sowing the seeds of discord and hatred among races right now? He is the leader of Umno Youth who has now called a government minister stupid. Anwarā€™s tepid response was that he wouldnā€™t respond to the remark.

If he canā€™t control Umno and make its leaders behave in the interest of national reconciliation and progress towards the common objective of eradicating poverty among all Malaysians, he is already severely handicapped.

The issue of poverty cannot be tackled without increasing wages. Most Malaysians are wage earners, whether daily or monthly, whether with a contract or without. Unless this issue of wages is settled, poverty cannot be eradicated.

This issue is complicated by two factors - imported labour and poor productivity - a vicious cycle which pushes real wages (after inflation) down.

Previous governments were seduced by employers to allow the cheap import of labour to increase production, depressing wages for millions of Malaysians for decades after.

This was particularly vicious under the Umno government, during Dr Mahathir Mohamadā€™s 22-year first reign as prime minister from 1981-2003.

The import of labour was not only uncontrolled but gave rise to many corrupt activities resulting in employers and workers paying huge amounts in service fees which benefited neither them nor the workers but instead made many Umno cronies rich and even some ministers.

The first step in fighting poverty is therefore a phased control of migrant labour so that local labour gets its due wages. Malaysia cannot depend on cheap labour for production but must instead, move up to greater automation and better trained workers whose productivity is better.

Itā€™s a lengthy process, starting with education and changing employersā€™ addiction to cheap overseas labour to keep their costs down.

The issue of vocational training too needs to be addressed and measures to increase self-employment. Tough as it is, it has to be done.

For a start, training programmes in certain key industries may be needed as imported labour is phased out. Also, when corruption and the infamous middlemen are cut out altogether, even the cost of imported labour can go down and the benefits passed on to the workforce.

Commit to minimum wage, eradicate graft

The government should commit to the minimum wage and set a target to increase it yearly by say three to five percentage points above the inflation rate.

That will force employers to increase productivity, aided by government incentives and training programmes for locals.

Next, corruption. The key problem is that dirty word called patronage where people in power dish out projects to their cronies at ridiculously favourable rates.

Thus, we have concession holders who reap billions in profits in areas such as independent power production, water and tolled roads, as well as numerous construction projects.

Each of these has layers of corruption including political donations, money into individual pockets for awarding work, kickbacks in numerous contracts, etc - all of which cost billions to the people and result in inefficiencies. Even outright theft of borrowed money as in 1MDB is a problem.

The country simply cannot afford that scale of corruption, perpetuated and developed to a coarse art, rising to intolerable proportions under none other than Umno which Harapan does not seem to be able to control despite its 81 parliamentary seats against Umnoā€™s 26.

We have an Umno deputy prime minister who faced 47 charges of corruption but received an inexplicable discharge not amounting to acquittal.

Many other Umno bigshots brought to court in Harapanā€™s brief first time in power post the 2018 elections in similar situations have been similarly fortunate. Why?

In short, there is little substance out there so far which has been proposed or which has been implemented to deal adequately and tellingly with either poverty or corruption.

With huge challenges facing Anwar and little to show after one and half years in power, one should excuse us if we show some scepticism over what he says. Itā€™s up to the prime minister to prove us wrong ā€“ and we would be delighted if he does.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 4:54 PM   0 comments
DAP and MCA - Folie Ć  deux (delusion or mental illness shared by two people in close association) By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 15, 2024

Malaysiakini : ā€œSome politicians stand on the high moral ground and appear to be kind and courteous in public, but they are cruel and heartless. To them, any means justifies the endā€.

This, of course, also applies to the DAP and the roster of political operatives who have fallen out of favour with the mandarins in power or discarded for various reasons, pointing to the kind of internal politics which, while toxic, does not have to impede nation building.

The fact that DAP and its base are fairly disciplined either points to the cultish nature that grips the party or the retreat into identity politics that defines the mainstream political discourse in this country.

And so, prophetic of the latter, Chua said ā€“ ā€œAs a candidate in the election, however, I was more worried that Anwarā€™s supporters in Umno will not support BN candidates. Fortunately, the Chinese community gave overwhelming support to MCA and Gerakan candidates.

ā€œUmno candidates, on the other hand, suffered as the Anwar factor caused Malay voters to reject the party. It was largely thanks to Chinese support that the BN was able to retain the coveted two-thirds majority in Parliamentā€.

Now, of course, it is easy to dismiss Chua as just another politician who went down in a sex scandal but what we are really talking about here, is how the DAP is failing not only the Chinese community but the whole non-Malay/Muslim community, replicating the same mistakes MCA made.

We have to understand the political theatre that fights like these, between non-Malay power brokers, is a distraction for the non-Malay base, because what it covers up is that non-Malay participation in the fields of economic, educational, and social spaces is always under threat from the ā€œketuananā€ (supremacy) system.

Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming is not stupid. Indeed, he is correct (even though he doesnā€™t seem to have the cojones to confront Akmal) that these boycotts are hurting workers and the national economy.

Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming
You have to wonder why Umno wants to hurt workers and the national economy and if the DAP were sincere in their efforts for a Malaysian Malaysia, they would publicly ask their partner (Umno) why they would want to hurt the economy and more importantly, jobs.

Oh, I am sorry since they have direct access to the prime minister, they should ask the prime minister, why is he allowing his deputy prime ministerā€™s party to wreck the economy.

Instead, this issue of boycotting has become a tool for the government to give more power to the religious bureaucracy and has frightened non-Malay/Muslim businesses.

The idea this government, a government DAP is a part of, is promoting the idea that religious sensitivities trump economic interests, is the shape of things to come.

Mind you, this really isnā€™t even about religious sensitivities but rather the internal politics of the Malay establishment wreaking havoc on the economy.

And what is the DAP doing about it? Well, nothing much. I get the reticence if this was a petty issue but the political and social reverberations of this issue will directly impact the non-Malay/Muslim community.

What are DAPā€™s brightest doing?

DAP and its supporters always claim that they have the best and the brightest, a sentiment shared by Chua ā€“ ā€œThe best and the brightest Chinese youth shun politics in general, and MCA in particular.

ā€œI hate to admit it, but the fact is that the DAP, despite all its deficiencies, has attracted a lot of talented and dedicated young leadersā€.

But, what are the DAPā€™s best and brightest offering?

Where is Howard Leeā€™s arrogant bravado when it is needed? After all, he said, that he doesnā€™t entertain ā€œemotive questionsā€ so maybe he should be the one spearheading the DAPā€™s rebuttal against the racial and religious provocations of Akmal.

But then again maybe Lee only knows how to show some cojones against a female Chinese reporter.

What we get is DAP Youth chief Dr Kelvin Yii (who in any other circumstance, I would argue is a very capable young political operative) reminds everyone not to call each other names.

Really? Akmalā€™s provocations and rabble-rousing have inspired domestic terrorist acts and the best DAP can come up with is reminding everyone that this country needs ā€œmature politics ā€œ.

Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh

What people forget is that the extreme forces in this country have always held mala fide intentions to any non-Malay enterprise that would make it easier for the non-Malays to participate in this country.

I am sorry, but when Canning state assemblyperson Jenny Choy says - ā€œWe (DAP) will debate by showing our performance and we will refute with facts.ā€ I have to ask, showing who?

I get that you believe your base will vote for you no matter what (and you may be correct) but what Akmal is doing is making it more difficult for the non-Malay/Muslims to operate within the already limited business ecosystem of this country.

And what facts are you talking about? The fact that your political partner Umno has got a taste of starting economic boycotts (whose effectiveness is debatable) but which has given more power to the state through the religious bureaucracy to disrupt business in this country?

The fact that domestic terrorist acts have not only happened to a DAP political operative but also to a business in this country? The fact that businesses are now being targeted by religious extremists in this country? Does all of this sound familiar?

The MCA and DAP really are a folly of two.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 9:50 AM   0 comments
ROYAL MALAYSIA POLICE SARAWAK COMPONENT POLICEMEN KILLED DURING THE INSURGENCY ( 1952 ā€“ 1983 Total -77 )
Saturday, April 13, 2024

1952 August 6 Cpl 198 Natu Bin Kadir killed at Old Kuching-Serian Road.

1959 August 18 PFF PC 1448 Rasin Ak Gening killed. Place unconfirmed. PFF PC Raun Ak Garing killed. Place unconfirmed.

1960 October 1 PC 1327 Langit Ak Sawa killed. Place unconfirmed.

1962 January 12 Cpl 16 Awang Yahya Bin Pengiran Azid killed. Place unconfirmed.

December 8 The four Poliemen killed when the Brunei rebels raided Limbang Police Station were :

Cpl 652 Kim Huat, PC 809 Bujang Bin Mohamad. PC 1374 Wan Jamaludin, PC 1391 Insol Ak Chundang,

1963 April 12 Cpl 570 Ramek Ak Nongian killed at Tebedu, Serian.

April 14 PC 628 Alek Bin Omar killed at 1st Division border. May 4 Insp D.S.H.Reddish killed. Place unconfirmed.

September 28 The Policeman and nine Border Scouts killed at Long Jawe, Belaga District were :

PFF PC 1542 Bettie Bandong,

BS 1007 Liew Maling,

BS 1011 Anyi Choh,

BS 1013 Jai Baleng,

BS 1014 Ului Tanyang,

BS 1015 Ladak Udau,

BS 1016 Ipa Along,

BS 1042 Unang Adang,

BS 1045 Jalang Pe, and BS 1047 Hanyi Jek. November 13 BS 2511 Budu Ak Santap killed. Place unconfirmed.

1964 February 1 PC 883 Rosli Bin Matra killed. Place unconfirmed.

March 8 BS 687 Pasang Ak Ngala killed. Place unconfirmed.

April 13 BS 58 Kimmo Ak Mideh killed. Place unconfirmed.

BS 640 Jikep Ak Oreng killed. Place unconfirmed.

December 12 BS 344 Nyawa Ak Lacun killed. Place unconfirmed.

1965 January 22 BS 901 Nopan Ak Lingod killed at 1st Division border.

April 4 Cpl 1118 Nonjey Ak Nyunboi killed. Place unconfirmed.

May 12 BS 2508 Nuuh Ak Olinuh killed at 1st Division border.

June 14 BS 458 Ranyih Ak Baser killed. Place unconfirmed.

June 27 Sgt 701 Simon Peter Ningkan killed at Siburan Policed Station, Kuching.

PC 1129 Naing Ak Kaboh killed at Siburan Police Station, Kuching.

July 5 PC 43449 Anthony Bambun Ak Umin killed. Place unconfirmed.

October 2 BS 4267 Liew Ak Choy killed. Place unconfirmed.

October 14 PFF DSP Robert Graves GM killed at 2nd Division border.

October 19 Sgt 791 Nyuicor Ak Dollah killed. Place unconfirmed.

1968 August 26 BS 800 Jimbai Ak Gudai killed. Place unconfirmed.

November 18 Sgt 1404 Edward Kula Ak Ngang killed. Place unconfirmed.

1970 June 29 Three Border Scouts killed in election boat at sg Pedai, sarikei. Sarikei. Identity unconfirmed.

August 13 SB Cpl 43501 Kong Siew Long killed at Sg Lukut, Kanowit.

August 16 PC 48041 Ibrahim Bin Ali killed in Sibu Town.

August 27 PC 43710 Salleh Bin Man killed in Sibu Town.

August 27 The 12 Border Scouts killed at Sg Tugam- Sg Matau, Ulu Sg Ngemah, Kanowit were :

BS Cpl 1245 Numbu Ak Keli,

BS 124 Sekudan Ak Dampak,

BS 1217 Imba Ak Caring,

BS 4049 Senang Ak Baji,

BS 4447 Jantuk Ak Jalong,

BS 4537 Edward Sli Ak Narok,

BS 4545 Pantau Ak Bara,

BS 4548 Kanching Ak Licar,

BS 4585 Galau Ak Sumpur,

BS 4616 Bryen Ak Balet.

BS 4617 Luyoh Ak Jaul, and

BS 4627 Lat Ak Cancun.

October 7 BS 4597 Kepu Ak Jelan killed. Place unconfirmed.

December 18 SB Insp Herman Wong Teck Hung killed at Oya Road, Sibu.

1971 April 17 BS Keli Bin Sebli killed in 1st Division.

June 27 BS 4621 Kong Fah Nam killed in 1st Division.

July 27 BS 1243 Bedarong Ak Kesa killed. Place unconfirmed.

August 9 BS 4351 Satos Ak Sumo killed near Beratok New Village, Kuching.

August 22 PFF PC 43061 Mijem Ak Nyoid killed in Sibu.

September 8 PC 1456 Janang Ak Muman killed at Ang Cheng Ho Quary, Kuching.

September 25 PFF PC 43743 Jabu Ak Ajai killed at Tulai, Sarikei.

1972 January 7 PC 43389 Abdul Azmi Bin Bujang killed in 1st Division.

January 18 BS 5513 Tanggai Ak Segai killed. Place unconfirmed.

March 21 BS 4877 Bujang Bin Aini killed in Kanowit.

August 1 PC 45393 Naruddin Bin Osman killed at Batu Kawa, Kuching.

September 17 BS 5440 Jamu Ak Mudo killed. Place unconfirmed.

1973 August 17 BS 4893 Aiam Ak Sanggai killed at Tanjong Kunyit, Sibu.

1975 April 6 The three PFF personnel killed at Stabau, Sibu were :

Supt Mohd Joini Bin Mustapha,

PC 1612 Nuing Ak Saling,

and PC 54542 Abang Masri Bin Mod Nor

1977 January 31 BS Sgt 4054 Jemat Ak Ningkangg killed in Sampadi Forest Reserve, Lundu. 1983

April PFF PC Mohd Salleh Bin Parimin killed at Sg Naman Sibu.

Note : The above list is compiled basing on memory and interviews. There may be cases unintentionally left out. For this, we apologize most sincerely.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 12:25 PM   0 comments
This is what being hurt really feels like By Mariam Mokhtar
Friday, April 12, 2024

Malaysiakini : We toppled the corrupt kleptocrat who led the corrupt Umno-Baru party in the 14th general election, but in a moment of madness, we retained many corrupt politicians in the 15th general election. Alarmingly, the more seasoned corrupt politicians escaped justice.

Former senior Umno-Baru MPs once claimed that the convicted felon, Najib Abdul Razak did not steal taxpayersā€™ money in 1MDB. The then cabinet swore that an Arab prince had donated money to Najib.

If they were easily misled, or too dense, why retain some of them in the Madani administration? Why are cronies helming some government-linked companies?

It hurts to know that corrupt politicians received new titles, with wages paid with our money.

Lazy politics

Malaysians are not stupid. Successive defence ministers treated taxpayersā€™ money as their own. The black hole in the Defence Ministry has swallowed up billions of ringgits alongside planes, helicopters, ships and armaments. Military leaders are promoted and on retirement, become consultants to squeeze more money from the treasury.

No former defence minister has been punished for the losses. These hurt our defences, our national pride and our coffers.

PM Anwar Ibrahim and his wife Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail at Dewan Rakyat speaker Johari Abdulā€™s (left) open house, where they ate cassava.

The Madani administration claims to protect the environment, but under the guise of ā€œdevelopmentā€, they cut down swathes of prime forest, build mega dams, flood land, villages and ancient burial sites, and destroy precious flora and fauna.

It hurts the Orang Asli and indigenous east Malaysians to be denied their ancestral rights and their basic rights to water, electricity, housing and education; but converting to Islam opens many doors.

Telling us to eat cassava, instead of finding solutions to resolve the rice crisis, is lazy politics. It hurts to know we have clueless politicians.

Then, with Mahathir, what did Yeoh expect?

We were naĆÆve or perhaps, desperate in 2018, to imagine that Mahathir would correct the many wrongs he started during his tenure, like institutionalised racism, cronyism and draconian laws. We were wrong.

Mahathir is good at political self-preservation. He knows that it is time-consuming and difficult to convince one man by logic and reason alone, but far simpler and quicker to convince a thousand men to believe in him, by appealing to their prejudices.

In January, he projected himself as the quintessential Malay when denouncing the loyalty of Indian Malaysians. He said, ā€œNo, Iā€™m not an Indian. I donā€™t speak the Indian languageā€¦ Iā€™m now 100 percent a Malay, I speak Malay and practise Malay customs and traditions.ā€

ā€˜Remember the Green Waveā€™

The United Kingdom is led by Rishi Sunak, a Hindu of Indian origin. The first minister of Wales is a black man. He is also the first black leader of any European country. Scotland is led by a Muslim of Pakistani origin, as is the mayor of London, a Muslim of Pakistani extraction.

In sharp contrast, Indian Malaysians are short-changed and given short shrift. Non-Malays are defined by quotas, from sports to scholarships and despite their citizenship are treated as second-class citizens. These hurt.

When we voice our concerns, we are shouted down with, ā€œRemember the Green Wave!ā€

The same people forget that Anwar and his coalition government are undertaking the countryā€™s Islamisation process on Abdul Hadi Awang and Muhyiddin Yassinā€™s behalf.

That hurts even more!

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:39 PM   0 comments
Is there a difference between PKR and the far-right? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Malaysiakini : Nik Nazmi is correct when he says the racial and religious narrative is not the sole criteria for certain PN voters but rather socio-economic issues.

However, the problem is that the prime minister and his willing enablers in Harapan are doing everything to reinforce the racial and religious narratives of the far-right.

Nik Nazmi talks about the balancing of expectations as if racial and religious preoccupation is going to make the lives of the majority Malay/Muslim community better.

Indeed, the Sock-gate fiasco has demonstrated that Umno and, by extension, Harapan do not care about the economic well-being of Malays as long as Umno thinks it can get political mileage from playing up this issue.

Fence-sitters are important as Nik Nazmi correctly points out but, hereā€™s the thing, fence-sitters want to know if there is a difference between Harapan and PN especially when it comes to religious discourse.

And this does not mean what Harapan supporters think it means. Do you know why Sock-gate was so damaging to Harapan? It is not because the non-Malay base was clutching its pearls the way how unity government provocateurs were clutching their pearls.

Winning over fence-sitters

Sock-gate demonstrated the difference in religious moderation between Harapan and PN.

PN was remarkably quiet about Sock-gate and was willing to give enough rope for Umno/Harapan to hang itself with. They remained quiet and disciplined, and even offered a few moderate words to the subject.

ADS

While non-Malay voters are sceptical of PAS/PN, the average fence-sitter would see how ā€œmoderateā€ PAS is and would even think this is how a moderate Malay/Muslim political coalition should behave.

Indeed, for these moderate fence-sitters, Umno/Harapan looked so detrimental to unity and harmony that even the Agong had to step in. So, for the fence-sitters, why not go with PN which does not create issues like this?

Harapan supporters think PN supporters are dumb for some reason. However, when DAP operative Hannah Yeoh claims the opposition plays up religious issues - when Umno did so, enabled by DAP, which stirred up religious issues and resulted in domestic terrorist acts - what do you think these fence-sitters will think?

This is the problem with the ā€œdonā€™t spook the Malaysā€ mantra. PKR is always trying to champion bumiputera rights as if those rights are in jeopardy. Two years ago, Terengganu PKR wanted the partyā€™s central command to address the ā€œimbalanceā€œ of awarding digital bank licences.

Terengganu PKR chief Azan Ismail, hoping the issue will gain traction, said: ā€œWe urge the finance minister and prime minister to state their stand on this matter and what will guarantee bumiputera equity ownership.ā€

This basically means PKR is attempting to accuse the government of not being Malay uber alles (over all) enough.

Playing the class card

The Malay vote is all-important, which is why PKR, as a supposedly multi-racial party, is struggling. Former prime minister (twice) Dr Mahathir Mohamad has demonised PKR as being unacceptable to the Malay community because of its multi-racial component.

While PKR may never play the race card well, they can and should play the class card. There is a reason why PN/PAS are deathly afraid of the class card.

Anwar is at his best when he is rabble-rousing with the class card and pursues populist narratives like this: ā€œI want to tell the leaders with the titles of ā€˜Tunā€™ and ā€˜Tan Sriā€™ who are rich - if you really want to save Malays, give them half of your billions in profits tomorrowā€.

It is talk like this which frightens the more intelligent members of the religious extremist coalition going up against this coalition government. For instance, former Bersatu information chief Wan Saiful Wan Jan wanted to know if Anwar was attempting to instigate class warfare.

Wan Saiful, as part of the Malay political elite, really does not want any raising of class consciousness among the disenfranchised Malay classes but has no problem providing them with crumbs from the table through racial and religious entitlement programmes to keep them dependent and with a sense of racial and religious superiority.

Yes, going after the big fish when it comes to corruption is good optics, especially for middle-class or urban voters.

However, tackling corruption in entitlement programmes at the state and federal levels is more important to the voters that Harapan wants to gain traction.

This is because going after bureaucratic malfeasance like this actually improves their lives because the delivery system is made more efficient.

However, the government is afraid to seriously address corruption within the ranks of the civil service because they are afraid they may lose this vote bank - which they are already losing.

This again is part of the class conflict which would suit Harapan better than toxic religiosity that Harapan thinks will gain favour with fence-sitters.

In the end, I believe it would be better if Harapan fails as a reformist government than succeeds as a theocratic state.

Your mileage may vary.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 10:36 AM   0 comments
Are we descending into a police state? By R Nadeswaran
Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Malaysiakini : Startling response

What followed startled me. The same night, I received a reply part of which read: ā€œCan I seek your help to email the questions to this email address at corporate.communications@mcmc.gov.my so that we can do the necessary follow-up?ā€

Does it imply that action would only be taken if complaints are sent via email? Or is this a ploy to prevent the public from making complaints?

Was it incompetency, an indifferent attitude or simply making things easy for themselves to tap the forward button for someone else to handle?

Nevertheless, I sent an email the following day, and on Monday, I received a call from a friendly officer who said a reply had been sent, via email of course.

It was a lengthy reply that included the following: ā€œThe Commission collaborates closely with the police which is the leading law enforcement agency on sensitive matters involving race, religion, and royal institutions.

ā€œWe provide technical expertise, including intelligence and forensics analysis, for the police to expedite investigations and ensure appropriate action can be taken under relevant legislation like the Sedition Act 1948 (Act 15) and Penal Code (Act 574).

ā€œThe collaboration is also expanded through the establishment of the ā€˜Policeā€“MCMC Investigation Task Force of 3R Casesā€™ in combating online content that threatens national harmony.

ā€œIn addition to requests from other leading law enforcement agencies and public complaints, MCMC also proactively monitors, takes down, investigates, and enforces the law against any content violating Section 233 of Act 588, regardless of background, ideology, or political affiliation.ā€

No action on complaint

Satisfied that there had been corroboration with the police, I decided to wait for a further response before I put pen to paper.

Imagine the surprise when on April 3 - a good 10 days later - Inspector-General of Police Razarudin Husain said no reports had been lodged against Akmal over his Facebook post that showed him wielding the sword.

This means that the MCMC had sat on my complaint and did not refer my complaint to the police or the Policeā€“MCMC Investigation Task Force for appropriate action, as claimed.

Do I have reason to believe the complaint was classified as ā€œno further actionā€ and filed in a steel cupboard to gather dust?

Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh

Certainly. Why else would the IGP say that no report was made? And it leads me to believe that MCMC is selective in the application of laws and their enforcement.

The drama continued. On April 4, Akmal confirmed on his Facebook page that he was arrested in Kota Kinabalu, saying he was held despite being scheduled to record his statement at the Dang Wangi police headquarters in Kuala Lumpur the following day.

But who came to the fore to comment after weeks of silence?

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim stepped on the plate to say Akmal was not arrested but called up to facilitate an investigation.

Akmal himself confirmed he was arrested but did Anwar know better?

Different strokes

On March 22, Ricky Shane Cagampang, 33, pleaded guilty in the Kota Kinabalu Sessions Court to making a Facebook post deemed insulting to Islam concerning the sale of socks bearing the word Allah.

He was charged under Section 233(1)(a) of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 with misusing network facilities on March 17 and sentenced to six months jail and an RM15,000 fine.

The case was investigated, the offender was arrested, got the nod from the Attorney-Generalā€™s Chambers, produced in court, convicted and sent to prison - all in five days.

Surely, it must be a record of sorts and the police force must be proud of itself. Will it be emulated in other cases involving the offence of misusing network facilities?

We wait with bated breath but something still lingers in my mind.

Chin has yet to be investigated for the post. He was not the maker or publisher of the video and yet MCMC wanted his post removed.

My complaint about a sword-wielding politician was ignored.

Are lesser mortals Chin and I treated differently from the loud-mouthed politicians who can do or say anything with total disregard for the law?

Different strokes for different folks or are we headed for a police state?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 2:58 PM   0 comments
Akmal knows DAP is the new MCA By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 08, 2024

Malaysiakini : Loke says the DAP speaks up through the proper channels. Mind you, ā€œproper channelsā€ in Malaysian parlance are channels which are private, and nobody can hold you accountable for what you said or claim to have said.

DAP secretary-general Anthony Loke

Take this powder keg Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh issue for instance.

Loke claims to have spoken to Umno big cheese Ahmad Zahid Hamidi and Malacca grand poobah Ab Rauf Yusoh and ā€œexpressed DAPā€™s position on the matterā€.

Two questions - what is DAPā€™s position on this matter because the central command really has not put out any statements, while factotums of the DAP have been speaking up but have been told to put a sock in it by the dear leaderā€™s party. And secondly, why are you speaking to Umno?

Now some would argue that DAP is speaking to Umno because Akmal is their problem child. However, that is nonsense.

Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh

The prime minister is supposed to be the most powerful or influential figure in this unity government, so why didnā€™t the DAP, who has the bigger voting bloc, just bypass Umno and tell the prime minister to control his rabid handmaidens to power?

Loke said, ā€œI donā€™t know how MCA conducted themselves while in government but for us (DAP), there are matters that we will raise directly with the prime ministerā€ which means shouldnā€™t the DAP be raising this issue with the prime minister himself?

But then again, seeing as how the prime minister was silent when the cars of a DAP political operative were firebombed, perhaps running to the prime minister about a Chinese businessperson being targeted for a mistake his company made and which he has profusely apologised for is not such a great idea. 

Loke reminisces of how as a young person he was firmly in the DAP camp and his rivalry with an MCA kid has some sort of totemic symbolism of the fight the party was waging for the soul of the Chinese community at the time.

The struggle between the towkay class and the average Joe. What he forgot to mention is that everyone from the working, middle, and plutocrat classes was voting for the MCA, and demonising the party now is merely indicative of the behaviour of DAP supporters who were steeped in the toxicity of identity politics that the DAP seems to encourage.

The reality is that DAP has bent over backwards to support pro-Islamic and pro-Malay policies, not to mention pro-Malay political operatives, all while being subject to the anti-Islam and anti-Malay propaganda that they should have tackled decades ago, instead of playing the victim card while engaging in the same behaviour they accuse the MCA of.

This is why, no matter what the DAP does, no matter how much they bend over for the Malay political establishment, it will never be enough. This is why we have these tensions within the DAP.

The identity politics in the DAP, like most forms of such politics, is reactionary. And do not for one minute think that the Malay uber alles establishment does not know this.

Akmal is the smug poster child for the Malay uber alles crowd. While political operatives from Umno have claimed they have told him to stop these provocations, while the Agong has told everyone to cease and desist and while he is under a sedition investigation, he understands that he has the power to give the middle finger to everyone.

Political operatives like him understand that it really does not matter what they do because the DAP support base will not punish the DAP, unlike the Malay majority polity who have demonstrated their willingness to shift their support to whatever reactionary Malay/Muslim party they think best serves their interests.

DAP supportersā€™ deflection game

The DAP, through its minions online, always harass and attempt to deflect from their failings. DAP asks if not unity government, who else? Would you rather see Perikatan Nasional take over?

Ok, hold it right there, you disingenuous cretins. The DAP has worked with every race-based party that has come into creation, so do not for one minute think this card plays with rational people.

Unfortunately, as Loke demonstrated with his ā€œI donā€™t like the MCAā€ card, partisan politics is not rational. Rational people ask themselves why continuing supporting a party which is slowly eroding the secular and egalitarian foundations of this country.

I mean PN did rule the country and when the general election came, they had ruled so badly, that the vote albeit in a small way swung to Harapan and Umno was decimated. This is what should have been built on. However, it wasnā€™t and a rational person has to wonder why.

DAP supporters always ask what you expect the party to do. This is the problem right here.

You mean you do not know?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 9:30 AM   0 comments
Akmal the catalyst, and Anwar, bumbling incompetent By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, April 06, 2024

Malaysiakini : All it takes is a catalyst for things to go pear-shaped, and in the socks scandal, the catalyst for disrupting the peace is Akmal.

His hate speech spread fear among the community but he didnā€™t see it that way. He told his supporters that he was merely defending Islam.

Socks weaved with the word ā€œAllahā€, will naturally offend Muslims, but to allege that KK Mart had deliberately insulted Islam is equally offensive. What would KK Mart founder Chai Kee Kan have to gain from this? Can Akmal prove that this is what Chai had intended?

Akmal is the catalyst who stoked the fires of unrest. Without his hate speech, vigilante groups would not have emerged, and the KK Mart outlets would not have been firebombed.

His ego and hubris blinded him. His actions put the nation on a knife edge.

Putrajayaā€™s role

What about Putrajayaā€™s role?

Ever since March 16, Akmal boasted about teaching KK Mart a lesson and shutting it down forever for insulting Islam. He urged Malaysians to boycott KK Mart. He rejected Chiaā€™s apologies.  

Malaysians turned to the PM who had just returned from a fishing-for-investment trip in Germany. He muttered some weasel words about focusing on more important issues instead of bah kut teh and school canteens.

Did his aides inform him about the socks issue and Akmalā€™s racist rhetoric? The threatening and abusive remarks had the potential to cause unrest.

Are the home minister and the police clueless about managing conflict? Akmalā€™s provocations could have easily spilt over and snowballed into ethnic-religious conflict.

Anwar, his deputy Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who is also the Umno president, and Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail are rather naĆÆve to imagine that Akmal did not present a danger to the nation.

Since 1969, ordinary Malaysians have been swiftly investigated for making allegedly seditious comments. Can it be right that one lacklustre politician who defied the king, be allowed to provoke the public without being censured?

The socks scandal has spectacularly proven that semenanjung MPs just want to play politics and cling to power. Three ministers did try to rebuke Akmal but he dismissed their concerns.

The other MPs did very little, as most were thinking of their own selfish agendas, rather than thinking of the good of the nation.

More importantly, they put the interests of their own party first.

National problem

Two people who made innocuous remarks on their social media profiles were swiftly investigated and then punished, but the vigilante squads which harassed them and the people who exposed the personal details of the factory owner remain free.

An Israeli man who entered Malaysia, allegedly to assassinate a gangland rival was swiftly arrested together with the locals who supplied him with firearms; but the domestic terrorists who firebombed the three KK Mart stores, remain at large.

The Malaysian two-tier level of policing is loathsome.

Akmal is a national problem for creating mass fear beyond just the call to boycott KK Mart. His intransigence will destroy the nation.

A KK Mart outlet in Sarawak was hit by a petrol bomb

He damaged community relations, firebombers damaged property and the rakyat was crippled with fear.

The business community is afraid that anyone who bears a grudge against them may feel empowered by Akmalā€™s hate speech and use it as a cover for their own malicious intent.

It does not take much for a pyromaniac, or a juvenile vandal who is egged on by gang initiation or peer pressure, to commit arson.

Akmalā€™s hate speech may motivate an emotionally unstable, or aggrieved person, to firebomb a business, out of hatred, revenge, or a perceived slight.

The lone-wolf religious extremist may feel that Akmal has given him the go-ahead to defend Islam through violent means. He is prepared to become a martyr because controversial clerics have promised rewards in the afterlife.

Is it any wonder that across Malaysia, millions of people increasingly feel that the Madani government has lost its direction?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 12:00 PM   0 comments
The Akmal gambit By Bridget Welsh
Friday, April 05, 2024

Malaysiakini : In a highly global economy, Malaysia cannot afford to have this divisive discourse. Sadly, his actions parallel pouring acid into a wound with little regard for the pain.

A bad political rerun

Many could couch these actions as a repeat of the past; it has been common for Umno Youth leaders to use racial resentment and provocation to gain standing.

From other Umno medical doctors including Dr Mahathir Mohamad and former Youth chiefs, now-imprisoned Najib Abdul Razak to now-suspended Hishamuddin Hussein, this use of Malay chauvinism has been a well-trod path to rise inside the Malay nationalist party of Umno.

Many older Malaysians recall the language and symbolism used in the past by younger ambitious politicians and the trauma they caused.

Today, however, the violent imagery and messaging have worryingly been ratcheted up; instead of writing a book or holding a kris, the emotive video sharpens a blade after violence has already occurred.

Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh wielding a Japanese sword in a March 14 post on Facebook

Deeply concerning, the messaging goes well beyond legitimate criticism of a handful of socks stocked in a supermarket. It is an outright appeal to negative emotions - to anger and fear - that divides communities that should have no place among responsible leadership of a multiethnic society.

As Perikatan Nasional/PAS learned in the 15th general election, videos go viral and may glean support but they are not forgotten for their hurtfulness. In this era of instant social media, this is not a time where messaging can be contained or controlled.  

By comparison, PAS has wisely called for restraint at a time when emotions are high rather than using the KK Mart incident for political capital. It is after all a holy period for many faiths, a time for reflection and understanding.

A rise to national prominence

Akmal, however, has chosen his gambit. When the Umno Youth chief first entered politics as a candidate, he was seen as a moderate professional who would strengthen Umnoā€™s professional image.

He was highly respected and popular in Merlimau, winning the state seat in Malacca handily in November 2021 and rising rapidly into state leadership.

Akmal was appointed to the Malacca executive council for Health and Anti-Drugs after the state polls through April 2023 and now holds the exco position for Rural Development, Agriculture and Food Security.

Akmal received his national leadership position due to his loyalty to Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi. While he easily won the Youth party election in March last year, winning 102 out of the 189 divisions, he did so with the tacit support of Zahid and leaders close to him.

Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi

In the KK Mart response, Akmal has opted to come out of Zahidā€™s shadow, shedding his earlier political persona.

Now, Akmal is becoming known as a rabble-rouser and is arguably overshadowing Zahid, who allowed the KK Mart attacks to gain traction within the party and only spoke out after Akmalā€™s actions escalated.

The dynamic showcases Zahidā€™s weak leadership as Umno president, as he seems unable to control the young party leader.

Umno Youth has been a platform in the past to challenge and criticise sitting presidents as well. One cannot ignore this as Akmal overshadows Zahid.

Umno divisions over strategy

Within Umno, there are differences in how to position the party.

Since 2022, Zahid has been trying to position the party as ā€œmoderateā€ in the ā€œmiddle groundā€ compared to PAS. He has also capitalised on being Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahimā€™s ally, not least on his own corruption charges.

The strategy has not worked effectively among the electorate, with Umno continuing to lose support in the six state elections last year, with considerably more erosion of the Malay vote compared to Pakatan Harapan. Zahid remains the least popular Umno president in that position.

PAS/PN has made electoral gains out of traditional Umno support. It is no wonder that Umno is now competing using more extreme confrontational discourse, hoping to out-PAS/PN in emotional racialised appeals.

Some in Umno - especially those dissatisfied with the Anwar government - see Akmalā€™s ā€œfightingā€ as strengthening Umno. For some, he is indeed Umnoā€™s new hero.

Others suggest the strategy has more immediate pragmatic goals. As the Sabah election is on the horizon - either later in the year or (more likely) next year - some in Umno see racialised rhetoric as a means to shore up support for the party.

Sabah was where the party gained ground in 2020 after losing power in 2018. Ironically, they do not fully appreciate that a racialised approach will not help them to the extent they think it will in Sabah compared to Peninsular Malaysia.

This sort of peninsula politics is off-putting for most Sabahans. It is an electoral miscalculation out of a lack of knowledge of political dynamics in Borneo and alienating politicking.

Divisive rhetoric, nevertheless, is what is known (and easy as they have little to point to in terms of deliverables in office), so racialised rhetoric continues.

Targeting Anwar

Others see Akmalā€™s actions as an indirect attack on Anwarā€™s government. Not only is Zahid being overshadowed, but so is Anwar.

No question, the attack on KK Mart hurts support among the unity governmentā€™s largely non-Malay base and it has extended to Sarawak, where the owner of the convenience store chain is from.

Some in Umno are deeply unhappy to be part of Anwarā€™s government and support efforts to undercut the administration and showcase Umno as a party focused on itself/more independent rather than as part of a broad unity coalition.

Some in the federal coalition government are even seen to be willing to let Akmal speak out as they see Umno as one of the weakest parties in the federal coalition government, electorally, with the hope that this can strengthen the connection of Umno leaders to their base.

This has come at a cost to racial tensions. Unfortunately, Anwarā€™s government has not effectively promoted racial unity while in office and this has allowed for an empowering of racialised narratives.

Poor communication strategies have made this more challenging. Words unnecessarily used by those in government have been hurtful toward minorities.

The initial days of silence by senior leaders in the administration amid the KK Mart incident did not help, as others were allowed to control the narrative. Now, racialised rhetoric is dominant and feeding on raw emotions.

The ethnic polarisation evident in GE15ā€™s heated campaign is not far from the surface and is now being fanned irresponsibly. Ethnic conditions on the ground remain quietly but palpably tense.

It is an emotional time, as economic conditions and inflation are having an impact on society.

While many recognise Akmalā€™s actions as politically calculated, some buy into the anger being fuelled, as shown in the violent incidents to date and the support it has garnered.

It is easier to channel anger and frustration than to address more difficult underlying issues that promote insecurity and differences.

Akmal continues to speak out, basking in the heat of growing and worrying chauvinistic resentments. It is almost as if this is a political ā€œgameā€ rather than where lives are livelihoods are at stake.

Rather than base the discussion on issues that directly influence the well-being of Malays and can find a middle ground among all Malaysians, following the tradition of Malacca educationist and long-time grassroots politician Abdul Ghafar Baba, Akmalā€™s approach seems to seek political gain and to return Umno to its divisive racialised rhetorical past.

In Akmalā€™s gambit, Umno is gambling its past for its future, putting Malaysia as a whole at unnecessary risk.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 3:01 PM   0 comments
Would Muslims like putting themselves in non-Muslim shoes? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Thursday, April 04, 2024

Malaysiakini : Your businesses became the targets of ā€œterrorist attacksā€ and you were charged in court, and made to apologise numerous times to the non-Muslim community. Would Muslims respect non-Muslims?

Are non-Muslim religions less legitimate?

Imagine if you were banned from using certain words because the primacy of non-Muslim religions demanded that Muslims could not utter such words.

Imagine if non-Muslims were prohibited from attending and participating in the religious rituals of other faiths because it would cause them to deviate from their religion. Would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

Imagine if Muslims were called immoral for what they wore, or worse, compelled to dress a certain way because the non-Muslim minions from the state called for it. Would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

Former Pahang mufti Abdul Rahman Osman

Or how about if you were told to convert because it would make things easier? Remember what the Pahang mufti said after his kafir harbi statements all those years ago - ā€œWe are not forcing but I urge non-Muslims to convert to Islam to be safe in the afterlife and for unity in Malaysia. There will be no more chaos and we can focus on development.ā€

Imagine if the religion of the state was a non-Muslim religion and a preacher said the same thing the Pahang mufti did. Would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

Imagine if non-Muslims mocked your religion and the authorities would not do anything about it. For instance, if reporters went undercover in your religious ceremony and disrespected your religion in the most public manner. 

Remember what the then attorney-general said when undercover reporters went to a church and then spat out the holy sacrament? He said: ā€œThe actions of the two reporters may have hurt the feelings of the people but I was satisfied that they did not intend to offend anyone. It was an act of sheer ignorance.

ā€œTherefore, given the circumstances at that particular time and in the interest of justice, peace and harmony, I decided not to press any charges against them.ā€

If the shoe was on the other foot, would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

Freedom of worship being chipped away

What if you were constantly told not to interfere in the affairs of non-Muslims even though these issues affect us as fellow Malaysians? Think about it. The Federal Constitution guarantees free speech and freedom of worship but the reality is those freedoms have been chipped away for decades.

While on the surface we have those rights, slowly but surely, the supremacy of the non-Muslim religion of the state - not as some sort of state religion but as a means of control - sublimated the intent of the Constitution. Would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

Imagine if the gerrymandering and disproportionate weightage of votes meant that as a Muslim you were disenfranchised from the political system.

Imagine if your vote was diluted because of the machinations of the state and what you were left with were political operatives and a government that did not accurately reflect the will of the people? Would Muslims still respect non-Muslims?

This is not about respecting each other. It is really about control and power. This is what is happening in Malaysia.

Muslims in Singapore are thriving so we do have an inkling of what it would be like if the shoe was on the other foot.

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 2:52 PM   0 comments
Does it matter if Anwar gets a second term? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 01, 2024

Malaysiakini : Funnily enough, this is not a ā€œMalayā€ problem. The popular Malay vote is not with this government, hence the fall of this government is not something the majority of Malays are fearful of.

The people most invested in this government are moderate Malays (not even progressive or liberal but middle-of-the-road when it comes to their religious inclinations, Malays) and of course the non-Malay/Muslim polity.

So, if anyone wants Anwar to have a second term, it is this base.

Anwar, meanwhile, has remained silent when his comradesā€™ cars have been firebombed by terrorists, a KK Mart was an attempted target of a terrorist attack, and - as of writing - another KK Mart has been targeted in a successful if non-fatal terrorist attack, and of course, the numerous other racial and religious provocations that his non-Malay base has been subjected to.  

Treating terrorists with kid gloves

The second terrorist attack against KK Mart elicited a tepid response from Anwar loyalist and Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail, who said: ā€œI urge those who pushed for this boycott to also take responsibility to defuse the situation and end actions stoking public sentiment.ā€

Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail

Excuse me, why isnā€™t the Madani government taking responsibility and detaining Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh under Sosma or whatever draconian laws that Harapan political operatives now claim are needed to protect racial and religious harmony?

And why ask people like Akmal to take responsibility when you are essentially saying the same thing Akmal is saying?

When Akmal called for a boycott, the government should have distanced itself from Umno Youth and Umnoā€™s provocations and instead called for people to respect the investigative process.

The prime ministerā€™s response only after the second attack was no better. These were terrorist attacks enabled and emboldened by the polemics coming from his unity government.

By warning people not to take the law into their own hands, he is implying that thereā€™s a rational and justifiable basis for their anger.

This is not the right approach to terrorist attacks. Anwar should have practised the moderate Islam he likes to preach about.

Scorch marks at a KK Mart outlet in Kuantan, Pahang, following a firebombing on March 30

Instead, the Madani regime - which included the DAP - simply said nothing and stood idly by, and in some cases, encouraged aggrieved feelings within the Malay polity.

You do not get to condemn the arsonist when you did nothing to prevent his act which led to the fires that everyone is now attempting to distance themselves from.

Non-Malays have no alternative

Anwar is very well aware that although non-Malays rant and rave on social media, the reality is that when it comes to the ballot box, they will vote for his proxies because they believe that as flawed as he is, there is no alternative.

This is why Rafizi Ramli so confidently said ā€œIf you want to talk about the trust deficit of non-Malays, I can confidently say that more than 90 percent of non-Malay voters have full confidence in todayā€™s unity government. If there is a trust deficit, it is a trust deficit in the opposition, not the government.ā€

Take the KK Mart issue, for instance. Now, you can make the argument that there is inter-party political chicanery afoot and Akmal is merely a proxy for interests within Umno hostile to this unity government, but the fact that Anwar - for whatever reason - is not willing to publicly rebuke a young upstart causing not only religious and racial issue but also economic issue demonstrates how ineffective he is as a leader or how much say he has in what Umno does.

This is why PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang laments the old timers, who desperately attempt to replicate the success of BN when the political terrain has changed.

Hadi understands that the fear of the ā€œGreen Waveā€ in the non-Malays is so powerful, that they will let Anwar, supported by the DAP, hasten the Islamisation of this country, thus doing his job for him.

PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang

Remember when Anwar expanded the budget and role of Jakim because he wanted to introduce a more ā€œmoderateā€ form of Islam in the Malaysian body politic?

Dissenters who were appalled by this move were dismissed by the prime minister who reportedly said: ā€œI want Jakim not only to talk about religion and Islamic law. Jakim is to expand its duties, talk about economic issues, look at digital programmes, and look at the education curriculum.

ā€œThe responsibility is broader, so that the values of Islam can be applied, and this is opposed by those who do not understand, a small group of non-Muslims who write that ā€˜Anwar is now displaying his strong Islamist attitude, which he has tried to hide all this time by ordering Jakim to control all the systemsā€™.ā€

Itā€™s all about power

Look at how nobody in the mainstream political or religious establishment can bring themselves to admit that the people causing racial and religious tension are political operatives within the unity government. Keep in mind that the issue is not an issue about religious sensitivities.

If non-Malays reacted the way some Malays reacted to the Allah socks issue when it came to their sensitivities, there would immediately be a crackdown and political operatives would be detained under the various laws that Harapan promised to ditch.

Can you imagine if a Malay political operativeā€™s cars were firebombed because the non-Malays perceived that he had insulted their religion? What do you think the outcome would be?

The KK Mart issue is not about faith. It is about power.

The fact that the prime minister cannot outright condemn these terrorist acts and he and his allies play into the narrative that the Allah socks issue is an egregious stain on Islam in this country is indicative of the direction this country is heading towards when it comes to the theocratic state project.

At this point, does it really matter if it is Harapan or PN leading the country if the destination is the same?

posted by Major D Swami (Retired) @ 9:15 AM   0 comments
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