When
this kind of situation is occasional, you can say it is because of the
individual. But when you see the same phenomenon repeated at a social
scale across the country, it is no more individual caused. This is
exactly what the political class does not accept.
P. Waythamoorthy
Today
is the 10th day of my Hunger Viratham. Over the weekend we have had
people streaming in steadily to the temple, all feeling an inner
compulsion to share in my prayers. The warm touches, the hugs, the
tears, Vibuthi to my forehead, their words, and their looks all keep
feeding me with strength. I may be getting weak physically but my
strength to fight this oppressive system only gets stronger with every
passing day and with every warm touch.
Today
I want to write about Displaced Estate Workers to clarify some history.
This knowledge of history and the consequences are necessary for
informed decision making to solve national social problems, something
which is sorely lacking. I hope this will help.
Part five
Displaced Estate Workers.
In
my presentation at the UN office in Geneva in April 2008, I was not
sure if using the term “Internally Displaced Persons” for the evicted
Estate workers in Malaysia was appropriate,. Part way through my
presentation, I paused and asked the officials of the UN if the term
“Internally Displaced Persons” was accurate to describe the workers
in Malaysia who were evicted from the estates and they readily agreed
with me. So, there we have it, another distinct problem that we have
identified and given expression to.
The UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement defines Internally displaced persons as "persons
or groups of persons who have been forced or obliged to flee or to
leave their homes or places of habitual residence, in particular as a
result of or in order to avoid the effects of armed conflict, situations
of generalized violence, violations of human rights or natural or
human-made disasters, and who have not crossed an internationally
recognized State border."
In
the case of displaced Malaysian Indians they are forced to leave their
homes and places of habitual residence as a result of development
programs of the state and in violation of their fundamental rights. The
Indians have lived and worked in the estates for generations and in some
cases the forefathers may have lived there as far as the late 1800s.
The
British brought in South Indian laborers – whom they considered best
for the picking jobs in the plantations for a good 100 years from 1830s-
1938. They modified both British India policy as well as British Malaya
policies with the tacit approvals of the Malay rulers to facilitate
this mass movement. They set up infrastructure on both sides of the
Ocean to facilitate the flow of South Indian labor, the British splurged
on significant false propaganda to the gullible South Indian poor about
the good life, about a good future in the “land of plenty in Malaya”.
The
British offered free and heavily subsidized fares to travel to Penang,
to Port Swettenham and to Singapore for these laborers from
Nagapattinam, a port town in India. These laborers could hardly afford
the tickets from their villages to the port town of Nagapattinam let
alone to Malaya. Historical records that I have collated clearly tell
this tale of forced migration to Malaya all for the profit of British
enterprises and only for the profit of these enterprises.
This
stream of migrants coming into Malaya was termed assisted migration.
This accounted for the largest part of the migration. There was yet
another stream of migration called unassisted migration. These were the
traders, the teachers, the hospital assistants, the money lenders, the
policemen, the lawyers, the doctors etc. These unassisted migrants
mainly populated the urban centres while those that came in as assisted
migrants formed the hundreds of rural Indian communities deep within the
estates.
To
further boost migration each labourer who had completed his/her
indenture period of 2 years were promised a minimum of 5 acres each for
them to settle in Malaya permanently. So this is clear proof that for
the most part Malayan Indians were not “pendatangs” but invitees of the
Malay Rulers and British Government then acting in the capacity of
advising the Malay rulers.
But
the promises of land were never fulfilled by the Malay Rulers and the
British Government ruling in Malaya. The Indians effectively became
slaves. For generations they had the “Nambikei” that one day the British
and the Malay Rulers would take care of them. Even at the point of
independence they were not granted land by the British as what had
happened to similar workers exported by the Britishers
to Guyana and Surinam.
Post
independence the Indians went about their lives believing the estates
would be forever. In the 1970’s however, when rubber price fell the
Government devised new plans for the economy and for the plantations.
These plans were to have disastrous effects on the lives of the estate
workers in the ensuing years. The estate workers were evicted from the
estates as these estates were turned into development land for
commercial, industrial or residential purposes or were replanted with
oil palms. These workers were evicted without adequate compensation,
housing, alternative temples, alternative job opportunities or new
skills training. Most estate workers are given compensation ranging from
RM3,00 –RM5,000 in the 1970’s and in the current times about RM10,000
for working and contributing to the country’s economy for almost 4-5
generations – a pittance.
The
implications of this devastating forced displacement are best
understood by looking at the life of one evicted worker who is a
4th generation Malaysian Indian. When she talked to me about the
eviction she was so distraught and she said that all the family had
known was the estate for 3 generations. And they were summarily told to
leave. Their option was to move to the fringes of the town adjacent to
the estate. Before this eviction their visits to the towns were mainly
for some occasion. Otherwise their lives revolved within the estates.
They had a small kebun a couple of cows, some chicken and grew some
vegetables. The estate temple was the centre of their social and
religious lives. Her parents were married in that temple; her marriage
was in that temple too. Now it was all gone. So, too with the estate
school. It was gone too. Her community was completely destroyed when
they were all evicted. Each family found their different ways out of
this eviction and moved out helter skelter. Now she was staying in one
of the low cost flats. Before moving to these flats they had lived for
many years on tanah haram. Their children now grown up had put together
enough money to purchase this flat. If they had not the children, they
would have been condemned to a perpetually squalid life in their tanah
haram shacks. With their incomes and the pittance for compensation there
was no way they could have bought a flat on their own and no bank would
give them a loan either to support their purchase.
This
is just one of the stories of the 800,000 displaced estate workers.
Each displaced worker will have a story similar to tell. Almost all
Indian households have a link to this common past. Most are still stuck
in this trap of poverty. This is why Hindraf seeks a permanent solution
in the form of state intervention to get these people out of the trap
and to put them on a level playing field and to give them an even shot
at life.
Without
a proper program to support the displaced during the displacement
process, the result contains many of the elements of the life described
above. When this kind of situation is occasional, you can say it is
because of the individual. But when you see the same phenomenon repeated
at a social scale across the country, it is no more individual caused.
This is exactly what the political class does not accept. The outcomes
of these are daily visible in the social statistics – yet the
politicians across both sides of the divide prefer to remain ignorant.
Their way of dismissing all this is to simply think of all our demands
to correct this situation as “terlalu”.
The
displaced estate worker problem is a long recognized problem by the
elite. They just do not care enough to address it. These displaced
workers are the ones that form the lowest ranks of Malaysian society.
The way they got there or what is needed to get them out of there is
unique to the extent of the specific historical circumstances. So, the
statement of some half baked politicians that the source of poverty is
the same for the Chinese, the Malaysia and the Indians is plain dumb and
at best is just self serving.
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