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Thursday, 31 December 2009

Indian victims never newsmakers of the year.

Malaysiakini top ten news. Indians have to die at police hands to make it. Race based news worthiness in Malaysia?

Newsportal for the “underdogs”?

It has not only been this year but for almost the last eight years or so that we taken note that the only time even critical Indian issues get to the top 10 even in Malaysiakini (Malayasikini 28/12/09), the News portal for the “underdogs”? is when they lose their life at the hands of the Malay-sian authorities. kugan-griefThis year it was A. Kugan and that too it was the tail end at No.8 (Malaysiakini 28/12/09). We recallect that previously only S.Tharmarajen who also died in police custody and others who were killed in police custody made it to the top ten. Teoh Beng Hock was rightly made Malaysiakini’s news maker of 2009(Malaysiakini 30/12/09). But hundreds of other Indians also died very cruelly at the hands of the police but they don’t make it as the newsmaker of the year.

We must recognize however that during our most lean times Malaysiakini has given us the due coverage. We also appreciate their link to Top of blogs.

Most issues which concerns Indian victims however critical, unjust or unfair does not get the appropriate coverage for the only reason that the victims are Indians. klang-gh1The latest examples being the suicide of R. Seetha who committed suicide because her brother along with four other youths including a 17 year old juvenile were shot dead and killed in cold blooded murder by the police sharp shooters in their shoot to kill policy. 130820090831The Kampong Buah Pala the last traditional Indian village in Penang destruction by Kapitan Lim Guan Eng and ably aided and abetted by his Indian Mandores. p10204034And the 100 over year old hindu crematorium at Ladang Batu Pekaka, Kuala Ketil being destroyed by PAS. Pray tell us of one Chinese, Muslim, Christian or Buddhist cemetery that gets destroyed like this in Malaysia or in fact in any other part of the world including Somalia or even Zimbabwe.

But these three events would not qualify as the top ten stories even in “our” Malaysiakini because the victims are the poor and working class Indians.

Thus the present critical state of affairs concerning the Indians in Malaysia.

If even our Malaysiakini can do this to the Indians what more the mainstream print and electronic media.

The press deem these Indian stories not press worthy meaning it does not appeal to the majoritarian Malay natives and the Chinese who make up about 92% of the population.

The Indians who make up a mere 8% however critical their problems are do not qualify to be the top ten or even most other news on a day to day basis. Simply because they are Indians Thus the critical Indian problems getting worst by the day as it does not get the appropriate attention.

This is where the US, Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand and the rest of the western world differs in that they do not use race as the yardstick for press worthiness but in fact even bend backwards to cover the weak minorities because the rich and powerful majority will be taken care of somehow.

In the aforesaid case where 5 Indians were shot dead by the police Malaysiakini covered their story only after a victim’s sister committed suicide after also giving her four children paraquat but who survived. But a Chinese national who was detained for eight days at a police lock instantly gets Malaysiakini coverage because it is newsworthy”.

Malaysia today is another classical example. RPK would cover just about any other issue expect when the victims are Indians. Go through his site and see for yourself if he excludes critical Indian issue.

Needless to mention UMNOs’, NST, Utusan, Berita Harian and the Star, Sun Malay Mail etc.

We have asked many many reporters including the many Indian reporters after a lengthy explanation as to why they sideline and side-step reporting even on the critical Indian problems. They all have no answer and remain mum. This is what we have for freedom of the press in Malaysia and reporting going by “news worthiness”.

S.JAYATHAS

HRP Information Cheif

Waytha Moorthy sues DAP’s DCM Penang, Ex Perak Exco, ASP Vasantha Kumar etc

HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY MALAYSIA

NO.6, Jalan Abdullah,

Off Jalan Bangsar,

59000 Kuala Lumpur,

Malaysia

Tel: 03-2282 5241

Fax: 03-2282 5245

Website: www.humanrightspartymalaysia.com

Media Event (31/12/09)

Re : Hindraf Chairman P.Waytha Moorthy’s RM 100 Million Defamation Suit against DCM of Penang, immediate past Exco Member of Perak, police ASP in disguise as a “Hindraf leader” a DAP leader and six other local media companies.

Date: 31/12/09

Time: 11.30 a.m.

Venue: Kuala Lumpur High Court, Jalan Duta, Ground Floor

Thank you,

Yours faithfully,


______________

S.JAYATHAS

Information Chief

Poll shows strong Umno backing for Najib

By Leslie Lau - The Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 30 — Datuk Seri Najib Razak appears to have won overwhelming support from his own party, with a recent poll showing 93 per cent of Umno delegates saying the country was headed in the right direction, largely because of the “quality of national leadership” and “good administration”.

A total of 95 per cent of Umno delegates surveyed also expressed satisfaction with Najib since he took over as party president. Notably, 66 per cent of party delegates polled felt that Umno had recovered from the problems that led to its poor performance in the last general election.

The results of the survey by the independent Merdeka Center, commissioned by a local research house, suggest Najib is on a much stronger footing compared with his predecessor Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi prior to Election 2008 as he prepares plans to go to the polls, most likely either in 2011 or 2012.

According to a summary of the poll provided by Merdeka Center, satisfaction with the party president among delegates was very high at 95 per cent, with 60 per cent of them saying they were “very satisfied” with his performance since taking over the leadership of Umno.

"The main reason for the strong approval stems from the perceived improvement in leadership qualities," said the Merdeka Center.

Merdeka Center conducted the poll between Nov 4 and 11 of 358 Umno delegates from the most recent recent party assembly.

Coverage of the survey included at least one individual from each party division.

The poll also showed strong backing from party delegates for Najib's policies and ideas, including his 1 Malaysia concept and moves to liberalise the economy.

A total of 83 per cent supported moves to liberalise the economy while 94 per cent backed the 1 Malaysia concept.

Overwhelming backing for Najib in his policies suggests that the prime minister will not have to watch his back in pursuing reforms in government and in his party.

Crucially, the poll shows the Umno president has secured strong support from his party in facing off a strong opposition in the form of Pakatan Rakyat (PR).

The survey also found that 83 per cent agreed that “Umno should be inclusive of all Malaysians, not just Malays”. However the Merdeka Center noted that support for the idea was somewhat lower among those delegates below 30 at 77 per cent.

Notably, the poll found that 64 per cent of party delegates supported the remarks made by Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin, who has been the target of heavy attacks from conservatives in the party, that "Malays should break out from the siege mentality". But among younger delegates below 30, only 38 per cent supported Khairy's views.

However, the poll also found that 70 per cent of delegates agreed that "Malay rights and interests were being threatened by other ethnic groups in Malaysia". Younger delegates below 30 agreed most with this statement, with 76 per cent backing the idea.

An overwhelming number of the Umno delegates polled believed that the party's public image was generally positive, but at the same time 85 per cent felt Umno still needed to change or reform.

When asked what reforms were needed, 32 per cent said "continued improvement in party leadership qualities”, followed by 14 per cent who said “the attitude of party members”, while 12 per cent felt that party members needed to work harder to “strengthen the party”.

Only two per cent of those polled suggested “ending cronyism and nepotism” as a type of change needed by the party.

Asked about the specific problems faced by Umno, only 13 per cent of delegates felt the party was "too Malay-centric”, 27 per cent agreed that the party “favoured its own members over others”, 33 per cent agreed that it was not “taking public views seriously”, 47 per cent agreed that “money politics among office bearers” was a problem and 52 per cent agreed that there was “corruption in government”.

IGP, stop foaming at the mouth!

The IGP wants the British police to detain me and to send me back to Malaysia. He believes I am in London and am living in a luxury flat in Bayswater. But why does he worry so much about me when I am sure he has other bigger problems on his hands? Well, I suppose one of the many, many reasons is this Statutory Declaration about his dirty dealings, which I revealed earlier.

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

STATUTORY DECLARATION

I, XXXXXXXX Police I/C No: XXXXX, a Malaysian citizen of full age and residing at XXXXX Kuala Lumpur, do hereby sincerely and truly affirm and say as follows:-

I joined Polis DiRaja Malaysia since XXXXX and am currently serving as XXXX am the aide de camp (ADC) of the Inspector of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan (IGP Musa) XXXXXX

2. During the period that I XXXXX as ADC to IGP Musa, I observed many things that caused me to lose confidence in the leadership of IGP Musa. Many of his actions undermined the integrity and credibility of PDRM as the principal law enforcement agency entrusted with the maintenance of law and order of the country.

3. On many occasions, I observed that the public persona displayed by IGP Musa is totally opposite to his private conduct and actions which are unknown to the public and the Government. IGP Musa’s actions constitute a betrayal of his oath of office as the country’s No. 1 Policeman which in Malay would be considered as “Pengkhianat.”

4. I became disillusioned when Dato’ Christopher Wan, then Director CID, revealed to me that IGP Musa had directed a covert blog to be set up to make allegations of corruption against Dato’ Johari Baharom, then the Deputy Minister of Home Security. Dato’ Johari Baharom became the subject of an ACA investigation which damaged Dato’ Johari’s credibility.

5. I am also aware of various statutory declarations made by several policemen, police informants and subjects of police actions showing linkages between IGP Musa and the underworld, specifically concerning the RR detainee, Goh Cheng Poh @ Tongku, and one shadowy figure, BK Tan.

6. Based on my personal knowledge and involvement as the ADC to the IGP, I can confirm that the statements made by these deponents concerning IGP Musa are true and do correctly reflect the events as described by them about IGP Musa.

7. In specific reference to the events narrated in the SDs of ASP Mior Fahim Bin Ahmad (G/13237) and ASP Hong Kin Hock (G/10990) about the manipulations of promotions, ranks and postings in the hierarchy of the PDRM involving BK Tan, these are indeed true. I have personal knowledge and involvement in that I was asked, as ADC, to compile and co-ordinate such posting orders based on the drafts and proposals made by BK Tan. A copy of this draft which was subsequently implemented as police posting orders is marked herewith as Attachment “A”.

8. Officers were transferred to achieve certain objectives. In some cases, there were entrapments that made certain officers appear guilty of wrongdoings. In others, allegations were made against certain officers that resulted in them being given either 24 hour transfer orders or short notice transfers. This gave the impression that IGP Musa was eradicating corruption and abuses within PDRM, whereas in most cases that was furthest from the truth.

9. The credibility of these officers would be demolished such that whatever information they have gathered about IGP Musa would be discredited. These officers would suffer hardships being transferred away from their family and home base. They will also get bypassed in promotions and will suffer disciplinary actions without the proper process. Consequently, less able officers climbed the ranks and the victimized officers were used as warnings against others of similar consequences. This process of “mencantas” explains the apparent lack of ability by PDRM to tackle crime, the lack of motivation and low morale within PDRM that saw crime escalating at an alarming rate during the tenure of IGP Musa.

10. I tried to inform the higher echelons in PDRM about this matter in the hope that these superior officers could do something about the matters I have witnessed. Among those whom I had spoken to were:

a) Tan Sri Najib, former DIGP;

b) Dato’ Amir Sulaiman, Ex-Director of Admin;

c) Dato’ Kamaruddin Ali, Director of Admin;

d) Dato’ Othman Salleh, Chief of Police Negri Sembilan;

e) Dato’ Khalid, Chief of Police Selangor;

f) SAC II Lau Hong Soon.

11. When nothing was done about my complaints, I also raised this with some people outside PDRM namely:

a) former IGP Tun Haniff Omar;

b) Dato Johari Baharom, former Deputy Home Minister;

c) Dato’ Radzi Sheikh Ahmad;

d) Tuan Che Md Ismail of the Police Force Commission and another member of the Commission.

12. I also informed Dato’ Ramli Yusuff, the former Director CCD, whom I knew had been IGP Musa’s superior for 6 years and who, at that time was investigating some money lending syndicate linked to IGP Musa. I believe Dato’ Ramli would have reported this information to the Deputy Home Minister within the scope of his investigations on the money lending syndicate.

13. However, nothing much could be done when IGP Musa was given an extension of service of 2 years in July 2007 by the previous Prime Minister who was also the Home Security Minister. This served as a powerful endorsement that the Government is fully behind IGP Musa.

14. A sense of fear also gripped many within PDRM and outside when not long after that, in October 2007 during Ramadan, the lawyer who assisted CCD in the Goh Cheng Poh @ Tongku matter (after the A-G Chambers declined to prepare affidavits for these CCD), was himself arrested in a most humiliating manner and charged in court one day before Aidilfitri.

15. The message was clear that IGP Musa had the support of the ACA, the Attorney-General and the Prime Minister in all his actions. This fear, amongst officers in PDRM, translated into a need for self preservation after six rank and file policemen and Dato’ Ramli were charged for various offences. Not long after that, the A-G ordered the release of the said Goh Cheng Poh @ Tongku. Many in PDRM became demoralized that a criminal is released by resort to legalities whereas our own fellow brothers were charged.

16. It is not my intention to be disloyal to IGP Musa, but I feel guilty if I am contributory to this cancer spreading within PDRM. I am a career police officer and I have pledged to serve and defend PDRM and the country.

17. I am not unaware that I may be exposed to dangers by swearing this SD, but all that I have stated above are the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. I hope that what befell the 6 policemen, including Dato’ Ramli Yusuff, who are all facing prosecution, will not happen to me. Many of these officers who were charged ended up becoming taxi drivers, security guards etc which caused great hardships to their families.

18. Even if they are acquitted by the courts, as have recently happened to C/Insp Nordin, Cpl Wong and Dato’ Ramli, sufficient damage are already done to their careers and families. There is the added fear that the A-G Chambers will also appeal against the acquittals and drag these matters further until they are totally forgotten.

19. I hope that I will be given protection by the Minister and the Government for making this disclosure as it is made with the hope to improve PDRM in expectation of a new leadership era under DIGP Tan Sri Ismail Omar and that there should be an end to the persecution of officers who dare to do the right thing.

And I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true and by virtue of the provision of the Statutory Declaration Act, 1960.

SUBSCRIBED AND SOLEMNLY )

DECLARED by the abovenamed );;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;


at Kuala Lumpur this)

day of 2009 ) ……

=

-------------------------------------

Commissioner of Oaths

Catching RPK: Musa seeks British help


KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian authorities have asked London police to help them track down fugitive blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin.

Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said today police believed the blogger for Malaysia Today was “still in hiding in London.”

Speaking to Bernama here, he said Raja Petra should surrender because seeking his extradition would “take too long.”

In his latest posting, the blogger, popularly known by his initials RPK, once again taunts the police, saying it is beyond the mental capacity of Malaysian police to figure out how he got out of Malaysia, what passport he used and where he is.

Instead, he says, they should get cracking on a police report filed in July 2008 by Americk Siddhu, lawyer for private investigator P. Balasubramaniam.

Siddhu asked for an investigation to be carried out to “ascertain the person and or persons who unlawfully caused the said Mr Balasubramaniam a/l Perumal to state that the … Statutory Declaration dated 01.07.2008, which was made in my presence, was made under duress. I believe the offence of criminal conspiracy to cause criminal defamation would have been committed by this and/or these persons.”

In the statutory declaration referred to, Bala alleges that Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak had a relationship with Altantuya Shaariibu, the Mongolian beauty who was murdered in 2006.

AL-QURAN DAN YAYASAN RESTU


1. Yayasan Restu adalah sebuah badan bukan Kerajaan yang giat dalam pengeluaran Al-Quran yang dihias dengan lukisan bunga dan tumbuh-tumbuhan gaya Al-Quran tulisan tangan di zaman dahulu.

2. Yayasan Restu telah melatih penulis khad sehingga mereka dapat menulis dengan tangan Al-Quran dengan sepenuhnya.

3. Sekarang Yayasan Restu telah berjaya mengeluarkan Al-Quran dalam bahasa Melayu dan Inggeris yang disahkan oleh Jabatan yang bertanggungjawab dalam Kerajaan.

4. Pihak Kerajaan Pusat pernah memberi bantuan kewangan kepada Yayasan Restu. Pihak Kerajaan Barisan Nasional Selangor pula telah beri secara percuma sebuah bangunan untuk usaha menulis Al-Quran, melatih penulis-penulis khad dan mempamer hasil usaha murni mereka.

5. Yayasan Restu mengguna semua pendapatan daripada penjualan Al-Quran keluaran mereka untuk membiayai kerja-kerja mereka sahaja. Ia adalah sebuah non-profit organisation.

6. Saya amat berterimakasih kepada Yayasan Restu kerana menghadiahkan kepada saya tiap-tiap keluaran baru dan memberi sebuah Al-Quran yang ditulis tangan khas bagi saya. Mereka mengambil masa hampir lima tahun untuk mushaf Al-Quran yang unik ini.

7. Saya ingin syorkan supaya pelawat ke Selangor melapangkan masa untuk melawat Kompleks Taman Seni Islam Selangor di Persiaran Damai, Seksyen 10, Shah Alam untuk melihat penulis menulis ayat-ayat Al-Quran dan pameran Al-Quran Yayasan Restu. Saya yakin pelawat akan berbangga dengan kecantikan Al-Quran mushaf Malaysia yang dipamerkan.

8. Sebagai hasil sampingan apabila Quran mushaf Malaysia dipamerkan di New Zealand dan ceramah diberi berkenaan isi kandungan Al-Quran, ada pelawat bukan Islam yang kemudian memeluk agama Islam, Alhamdulillah.

Eye Asia

By Yeo Yang Poh

The word “politics” can have different meanings in different contexts.

The one that I wish to presently discuss concerns the processes of acquisition of power and authority in order to govern a state or a country; or in other words, to rule over a group of persons defined by geographical boundaries.

In this context, politics is widely regarded as something “dirty”, insidious, manipulative, devious, treacherous, often immoral, and sometimes downright evil. To be a successful politician, it is generally believed, one has to be cunning, deceitful, unscrupulous, and preferably with as little conscience as possible. Thus, many people stay away from politics, and discourage their children from being involved in politics. By staying away, it is as if one would avoid dirtying one’s soul or one’s conduct.

That kind of reaction (of distancing oneself from dirty politics) cannot be more mistaken, more dangerous, or more self-deceiving. Nevertheless, it is a viewpoint that is rather prevalent in many parts of the world, Malaysia included.

It is a pervasive practice that I wish to discredit.

It is politics that ultimately controls our lives, our dos and don’ts, our aspirations, and our hopes for our future generations. It is politics that causes poverty, creates discrimination and injustice, and brings wars and oppression to our doorsteps. That being the case, should we want to walk away and have no say in these matters? Do we do the minimum, and leave the rest to others or to chance? By staying clear of politics, and burying our heads entirely in making a living and minding our own business, will politics leave us alone and cease to regulate or govern us? The answers, I would imagine, are rather obvious.

If politics is dirty, it is only because we allow it to become so. It is our inaction and our abandonment that allows dirt to harden, and rust to corrode.

On each occasion when someone complains that politics is dirty, the obvious question that should follow would be to ask that person whether he is prepared to be governed or controlled by something so dirty? If he is, he truly deserves what he gets. If he is not, then he cannot hope to simply wash his hands of the dirt, by turning his back and pretending that he sees not.

Neglect and desertion are not neutral positions that one could take. Inaction and insufficient action may seem passive at first blush, but are in truth an active contributor to the perpetration of wrongs against both oneself and others. Closing a blind eye to a wrong is a betrayal of one’s social responsibilities. Declaring that politics is dirty, and therefore refusing to have anything to do with it (including non-participation in its broad cleansing process), in fact promotes the furtherance and worsening of an already bad situation.

Democracy is self-governance, as opposed to being ruled by an emperor whose word must be obeyed. Democracy is never a system that enables the people from time to time to vote in a group of angelic saviours who would miraculously put things right, provide fair and equal treatments, and let everyone prosper. A democratic system merely allows its inhabitants to vote into (and out of) office their representatives to temporarily perform the job of governing, on their behalf and for their benefit. The multiple tasks of self-governance always remain on the shoulders of the citizenry. What takes place is that the citizens have delegated those tasks to their elected representatives, not indefinitely, but for a (revocable) period of time.

Therefore, the strength of a democracy, and hence the well being of a society, does not, ultimately, depend on the strength and integrity of its elected leaders. Rather, at the end of the day, it depends on the vigilance and constant participation of its ordinary citizens. Democracy cannot rely on a few good men or women; it needs to be cultivated by a large number of ordinary but diligent participants.

Things go horribly wrong in a democracy, usually because the vast majority of voters go into a long slumber in the period between elections, simply expecting their representatives to do the right things while they themselves disown continuous participation in politics. Such prolonged hiatus plays into the hands of those who have acquired power. Hibernation of the governed is such fertile ground for the exponential growth of the greed and self-gratification of the governors. The scourge of inaction is a gift to the corrupt. The crime of silence is sweet sound to the ears of the political robbers of national wealth.

The saying that every people deserve the government they have is only partially correct. In a democracy, even after disregarding the cheating mechanisms, it is still a numbers game. Often it is the majority of the people who deserve any disgraceful government that they have allowed to be in power, while the minority (or some of them at least), despite their persistent struggles, are victims of the follies of those who outnumber them. The fact that many of these outnumbered victims continue at personal risk to educate and empower the majority is a source of both inspiration and admiration for those of us pessimistic about the future of human societies.

In fledgling democracies, politicians in power would do their best to discourage the general masses from political activism, except of course for their own supporters. Even with the latter, what is asked of them is blind loyalty, rather than participation with independent thinking.

There is an endless number of ways in which a population can be hoodwinked, deterred or cowed. Censorship and control of the media are common tools, as is harsh treatment of dissent. Subtler forms include the farcical delineation of politics from other spheres of life, as though political activities can be detached from other aspects of everyday life. In Malaysia, for example, an association of persons is not permitted to be involved in activities touching on politics, unless the association is registered as a political party. This is as absurd as saying that any group of persons who wants to play football must first register themselves as a football club, or that anyone wishing to advocate a healthcare system must be a doctor or a worker in the medical field.

Its absurdity lays bare the real motive of disenfranchising the people.

Politics ought to be a competition of ideals and ideas. It ought to be about the people. Politicians ought to race against one another to see who can better serve the public good. Politics, that which regulates our every breath, ought not to be dirty.

But in reality it is. Most of the time politics is only about winning, by hook or by crook. Acquiring power is an end in itself; its benefits for the corrupt are aplenty. Politics is no more about the people. It is no more about right and wrong. This is the curse that we have come to inherit. Unless we quickly do something about it, this will be the curse we will pass on to our future generations, with our own brand of voodoos added to it.

No lightening is going to come down from heaven to strike our decadent, corrupt, virulent and incorrigible politicians. Only we, the people, can cleanse their dirty politics and free our future generations from its curse.

First, we get rid of the monopoly structure of power.

3/11/09

Rest in Peace, Rajan Rishyakaran

by Nathaniel Tan

Someone called asking for directions to a wake, and I hadn’t any idea what he was talking about.

Eli called later with the bad news. It was on the blogosphere earlier, but I’d been nose deep in work and had totally missed it :(

I think John introduced me to Rajan, who like Eli, John, Hafiz, myself and many others wrote for a short-lived project I tried back in the day: Bolehland.com (someone noted that most have since become TMI columnists :P )

I remember he popped by my house on one occassion, where a group of us were playing cards. He wasn’t one of the evening’s winners, but he was a great sport and extremely warm company.

I remember his laugh and smile, his easy humour and even easier manner.

And now – all of it taken away by a single accident.

Sigh :(

Funeral Details:

Date & Time:
Thursday, 31 December 2009, 2:00pm

Location:
Grace Assembly of God Shah Alam
6 Persiaran. Petaling
Seksyen 28
40400 Shah Alam

See map.

Jom sertai peristiwa bersejarah hukum sebat MB (Chegubard)


Jom sertai Solidariti Anak Muda Malaysia (SAMM) dalam upacara hukum 'sebat' MB NS - pengkhianat ekonomi negara, seludup RM10juta pada 31 Dis 2009 , 5.00 ptg, berkumpul depan Pej.KEADILAN NS, Jln Rahang (pertanyaan 0123696474)

Datang ramai - ramai saksikan peristiwa bersejarah ini.

Wednesday, 30 December 2009

When will we change?

Here are the facts:
1. Why we need 1700 temples for only 3 million Indians in Malaysia? Its does not makes sense but we still continue to build temple and fight for it. We only have 450 Tamil schools in Malaysia and its getting lesser.
2. Every Friday, temples in the cities earn minimum of $500 ($2000 per month), no electricity bill and no water bill. Tamil schools get $50 per child per year and pays electricity bill, water bill, teacher’s salary and maintenance every month.
3. Most temples in cities are renovated, air conditioned and owns a beautiful wedding hall. Tamil schools was build in 1970's and still remain the same with broken table and chairs, spoiled fan and lights, buku pinjaman thorned, bad environment for student and teachers. Have you seen one Tamil school fully air conditioned except the HM room?
4. $2 million Batu Caves Lord Muruga Statue build by Indians with donation money by Indian people, minimum $10 million spend every year during Thaipusam by devotes (this is the reason the Devotees are worse ignorant person). Why blame government for not giving allocation fund for Tamil school, why can't we just pay $1 for praying and $9 for Tamil School?
5. Minimum $200 spend by Indian alcoholics on every weekend for clubbing and entertainment. When ask for donation of $5 for Tamil School, we ran away or ignore.
6. In every Indian house there is TV, HI-FI Radio, CD/DVD player and the classic Astro. They have watched all the latest Tamil movie even it's not out in theatre yet. Our children have to get buku pinjaman, no revision book, never or maybe once been to bookstore, never encourage them to take up piano class, violin class, swimming or language class other than those offered in school. No computer at home with reason can't afford one.
These are some of the issue that we ignore and still doing it. Some of you might have considered Tamil Education is a waste of time, for the rest of Indians are we still going to ignore it or make a change?
Please don't forget that in the 80's, Chinese schools and Tamil Schools were in the same level as Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan. There were more students in Tamil Schools and the infrastructure was same for both schools.
But today, look at Chinese Schools and compare it with our Tamil Schools (sigh). Please take note that Chinese Schools most of it are 100% non-government support. For your info, our government is trying their level best to abolish these two schools, their dream are coming true for Tamil Schools but not for Chinese Schools.
If you really care, just spend 2 minutes and take a look at any Chinese Schools nearby your house. You can see the parents will be waiting in their Mercedes, BMW, Toyota, Honda and even motorbike to pick up their kids from school back home.
I have never ever seen any Indian parents with their Mercedes, BMW, Honda or Toyota waiting for their kids outside Tamil Schools. Maybe there is, we can't see them.....Invisible.
Please think.........and do something

Makkal leader: Silence is best

KUALA LUMPUR: Embattled Malaysia Makkal Sakti Party president R.S. Thanenthiran yesterday broke his silence on the call for an extraordinary general meeting, saying his deputy and secretary-general were using "jungle rule".
"Who are they to call for the EGM? Do they have the list of central committee members who support the EGM?

"If they have, show me the proof. They cannot have jungle rule."

Last week, deputy president A. Vathemurthy and party secretary-general R. Kannan said the party would hold its first EGM in 90 days to elect a new president as members felt the party was lifeless under Thanenthiran's leadership.

They said a resignation letter would be sent to Thanenthiran and the EGM would convene whether the president agreed or disagreed to step down.

The decision was made after 15 of the 27 CC members held a meeting under a canopy in front of the party headquarters in Shah Alam where three motions were passed, including the decision to hold the EGM.

Thanenthiran said the group did not follow the party constitution and he would put a stop to the problem when all CC members were in the country.

"I'm taking steps to correct the situation and will meet everyone soon. Most of the CC members are abroad and will only be back tomorrow.

"But for now, silence is the best truth," he said, adding he would not quit as it would seem like he was condoning an illegal meeting if he did.

Earlier, when contacted, Vathemurthy said the party had posted two letters and sent another two by hand to Thanenthiran's house and shop, demanding that he resign as president.

He claimed that Thanenthiran accepted one letter at his house in Penang but immediately tore it up and used vulgar words on the senders.

"He even called them dogs and told them not to come to his house," said Vathemurthy.

He said the EGM was expected to be held in February.

Thanenthiran denied receiving such a letter, saying his deputy was spreading lies.

"I have never spoken dirty words in my life. Moreover, this is my fasting period."

Obama team more closely linking al Qaeda to terror attempt

On Tuesday from Hawaii, President Obama addresses the latest developments in the failed terror attack.

On Tuesday from Hawaii, President Obama addresses
the latest developments in the failed terror attack.

Honolulu, Hawaii (CNN) -- In a marked shift from previous positions, senior Obama administration officials now say they are starting to see an al Qaeda connection to the attempted terror attack on a U.S.-bound airliner.

In the days after the failed attempt on Christmas Day, administration officials steadfastly shied away from linking the incident to the terror group and, in some cases, said there was no evidence of such a connection.

But one senior administration officials said late Tuesday that "some of the new information that we developed overnight does suggest that there was some linkage there" with al Qaeda.

The senior administration official was referring to intelligence that White House officials obtained late Monday night and then briefed President Obama about on Tuesday in a secure conference call.

The secure call, which included National Security Adviser Gen. Jim Jones and top homeland security adviser John Brennan, took place shortly before the president delivered public remarks suggesting there were "systemic and human failures" that prevented the government from stopping the attempted terror attack.

Without being more specific, the senior administration official said there were "bits and pieces of information in the hands of the American government" relevant to the suspect.

The official said had that info "been assessed and correlated" it could have helped "disrupt the attack" earlier in the process.

Pressed on CNN reports that the suspect's father had gone to the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria to warn the U.S. government about his son's ties to extremists, and perhaps that information had not been shared throughout the government, senior administration officials refused to confirm or deny it.

The senior officials added that in the spirit of candor and transparency the president decided to unexpectedly come out a second time on Tuesday to address the American people in order to share some of this new information with them.

Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian man, is accused of attempting to detonate an explosive on an Northwest Airlines international flight as it was approaching Detroit, Michigan, on Christmas Day.

PAS, PKR and UMNO destroys hindu cemetery in Kedah. DAP won’t disturb Chinese cemetery in Penang.


In fact the DAP has bent backwards to protect the Chinese graves that even went beyond the Chinese cemetery boundaries and spilling onto the adjoining land (refer The Star 23/12/09 at page N16 below). But when it was the Indian Village Kg. Buah Pala this very same DAP destroyed the last traditional Indian village in Penang in October 2009 while PAS last week destroyed the local 100 over year old hindu cemetery, the last piece of history and heritage of the Indian plantation workers of Ladang Pekaka, Kuala Ketil, Kedah. And PKR destroyed the Ampang Hindu temple in early 2009. UMNO has a record of destroying one hindu temple in every week during the terror reign of former Selangor Menteri Besar Khir Toyo (reply by Selangor Menteri Besar Tan Sri Khalid to ADUN for Kota Alam Shah, Maoharan Malayalam at the Selangor State Assembly early this year). And all these atrocities by UMNO, PKR, PAS and DAP done with impunity.

This is the UMNO, PKR, PAS and DAP rulers set of justice when it comes to the Indians and Hindus in Malaysia. Why the double standards?

The bottom line is the Chinese and the Malays both have the economic and political clout which the Indians don’t. So the Indians are both the soft targets and easy prey to be bullied and to be pushed about and around by both UMNO and also PKR, DAP and PAS. This is the race based political reality in UMNOs’ Malaysia vis a vis PKR DAP and PAS.

P. Uthayakumar.

29/12/09

pkr-pas

Poll shows strong Umno backing for Najib

By Leslie Lau - The Malaysian Insider
Consultant Editor

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 30 — Datuk Seri Najib Razak appears to have won overwhelming support from his own party, with a recent poll showing 93 per cent of Umno delegates saying the country was headed in the right direction, largely because of the “quality of national leadership” and “good administration”.

A total of 95 per cent of Umno delegates surveyed also expressed satisfaction with Najib since he took over as party president. Notably, 66 per cent of party delegates polled felt that Umno had recovered from the problems that led to its poor performance in the last general election.

The results of the survey by the independent Merdeka Center, commissioned by a local research house, suggest Najib is on a much stronger footing compared with his predecessor Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi prior to Election 2008 as he prepares plans to go to the polls, most likely either in 2011 or 2012.

According to a summary of the poll provided by Merdeka Center, satisfaction with the party president among delegates was very high at 95 per cent, with 60 per cent of them saying they were “very satisfied” with his performance since taking over the leadership of Umno.

"The main reason for the strong approval stems from the perceived improvement in leadership qualities," said the Merdeka Center.

Merdeka Center conducted the poll between Nov 4 and 11 of 358 Umno delegates from the most recent recent party assembly.

Coverage of the survey included at least one individual from each party division.

The poll also showed strong backing from party delegates for Najib's policies and ideas, including his 1 Malaysia concept and moves to liberalise the economy.

A total of 83 per cent supported moves to liberalise the economy while 94 per cent backed the 1 Malaysia concept.

Overwhelming backing for Najib in his policies suggests that the prime minister will not have to watch his back in pursuing reforms in government and in his party.

Crucially, the poll shows the Umno president has secured strong support from his party in facing off a strong opposition in the form of Pakatan Rakyat (PR).

The survey also found that 83 per cent agreed that “Umno should be inclusive of all Malaysians, not just Malays”. However the Merdeka Center noted that support for the idea was somewhat lower among those delegates below 30 at 77 per cent.

Notably, the poll found that 64 per cent of party delegates supported the remarks made by Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin, who has been the target of heavy attacks from conservatives in the party, that "Malays should break out from the siege mentality". But among younger delegates below 30, only 38 per cent supported Khairy's views.

However, the poll also found that 70 per cent of delegates agreed that "Malay rights and interests were being threatened by other ethnic groups in Malaysia". Younger delegates below 30 agreed most with this statement, with 76 per cent backing the idea.

An overwhelming number of the Umno delegates polled believed that the party's public image was generally positive, but at the same time 85 per cent felt Umno still needed to change or reform.

When asked what reforms were needed, 32 per cent said "continued improvement in party leadership qualities”, followed by 14 per cent who said “the attitude of party members”, while 12 per cent felt that party members needed to work harder to “strengthen the party”.

Only two per cent of those polled suggested “ending cronyism and nepotism” as a type of change needed by the party.

Asked about the specific problems faced by Umno, only 13 per cent of delegates felt the party was "too Malay-centric”, 27 per cent agreed that the party “favoured its own members over others”, 33 per cent agreed that it was not “taking public views seriously”, 47 per cent agreed that “money politics among office bearers” was a problem and 52 per cent agreed that there was “corruption in government”.

KL to wait for Vienna UN envoy’s contract to expire

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 30 — The Foreign Ministry will not be taking any further action against Datuk Arshad Hussain, the diplomat who controversially voted against censuring Iran.

The envoy will remain in Vienna so he can attend to "personal matters" until further instructions from the ministry.

The Malaysian Insider has learned that the ministry has opted to wait for Arshad’s contract to run out. It is due to expire on March 8 next year. Arshad had retired last year and was given a contract extension.

The ministry will also ask the ambassador to resign from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) because he is contracted to the IAEA Board of Governors until 2011.

Arshad was recalled by the ministry after he voted against an IAEA resolution criticising Iran for ignoring UN Security Council and nuclear watchdog demands by continuing to build its nuclear enrichment programme.

Foreign Minister Datuk Anifah Aman confirmed to The Malaysian Insider that the envoy had been recalled because "he did not follow procedures and consult the minister".

It is understood that Wisma Putra and the administration are concerned over international public perception after Malaysia, along with Venezuela and Cuba, voted against the IAEA resolution.

The ministry’s Department of Information and Public Diplomacy (JPDA) also sent a circular to the country’s entire foreign mission that it was conducting a comprehensive report on the international media coverage on the incident.

The IAEA vote threatens to put Malaysia in the same category as Venezuela and Cuba, two countries well known to be at odds with Washington.

This is the second time in recent months that Malaysian officials are scrambling to minimise damage over diplomatic mistakes and gaffes.

Last month, Datuk Seri Najib Razak had praised former US President George W. Bush for his policies on free trade during the prime minister's visit to Singapore while attending the Apec leaders’ summit.

The implication, as noted by some US officials, was that in Najib's view Barack Obama was against free trade.

Government officials were forced to reassure their US counterparts that Najib did not mean any slight towards Obama.

The Malaysian Insider understands that such missteps and the vocal stand of some Malaysian leaders against the US have not helped in the Najib administration's courtship of Obama.

US officials are understood to be perplexed by Malaysia's position on issues such as the recent IAEA vote.

The IAEA resolution criticises Iran for defying a UN Security Council ban on uranium enrichment — the source of both nuclear fuel and the fissile core of warheads.

Opposition slams EC’s ‘cosmetic’ reforms

By Neville Spykerman - The Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUPMUR, Dec 30 – The Election Commission’s (EC) proposed reforms – a 24-hour cooling off period prior to polling day and three-day nomination period – got mixed reviews from politicians today.

Both recommendations are aimed at preventing violence and chaos during elections.

EC chairman Tan Sri Abdul Aziz Mohd, who was quoted in today’s Utusan Malaysia, said the proposals are being studied carefully before they are tabled in Parliament next year.

MCA deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek said the party must study the recommendations in greater detail but in his opinion, they are unnecessary.

“The present rules are all running well. If a small minority wants to create trouble, a cooling period won’t work anyway.”

Currently the cooling off period starts from midnight of polling day while nominations have a two-hour objection period.

According to the EC this has led to clashes, during nine previous by-elections, when supporters from both parties arrive in droves in a show of force.

Chua, however, said he was not convinced that there was a need for a three-day nomination period adding that the current rules were just fine.

Umno’s Datuk Seri Dr Khir Toyo said he fully supported the EC recommendations.

The Selangor Opposition leader said he made the same suggestions in his blog over a year ago.

“I believe too much time and resources are being spent on crowd control during nominations.”

Besides the police, personnel from the Federal Reserve Unit and District Office have to be on standby, said Khir.

He said there would be less chaos and cost if parties were allowed to nominate their candidates on separate days before the EC declares who is eligible.

DAP’s Tony Pua said it’s impractical for EC staff to wait three days for nominations but points out the process could be divided between the morning and afternoon to keep supporters from both sides from meeting.

“As for the extended cooling off period, I don’t believe it can work.”

The PJ Utara MP points out that currently campaigning is still being carried out over the Internet or via short text messaging (SMS).

“News never stops and you cannot prevent people from campaigning via mobile phones, Youtube or e-mail.”

He also thinks the reforms are not necessary and added the EC should concentrate on cleaning up the electoral roll, ensuring fair and balanced coverage for both the government and Opposition in the mainstream media.

PKR’s election director Saifuddin Nasution said the proposals were not new.

The Machang MP said Pakatan Rakyat (PR) leaders who met the EC prior to the Penanti by-election had already raised both proposals.

“These are not real reforms, but cosmetic changes.”

Like Pua, he said the EC should clean up the electoral roll because issues, such as dead voters or voters who are registered in two different constituencies, keep cropping up.

“As for postal voters, the EC currently waits for the military to inform them when a soldiers retires, which takes as long as a year before names are removed from the electoral roll.”

More importantly, the EC should ensure fair reporting for all parties in the press he said.

“Our neighbours such as Indonesia, Thailand and Philippines are ahead of us because their newspapers give fair coverage to all parties but over here the EC says it’s not their responsibility.”

Saifudin adds the EC should also use permanent ink to stop individuals from voting twice.

The system was nearly implemented in the last general election but was called off four days before polling day.

Saifudin said the Inspector-General of Police, Attorney-General and Election Commissioner, in a joint press conference, said three men were arrested for trying to sabotage the system.

“However, subsequently in Parliament then-Home Minister Tan Sri Syed Hamid Albar denied anyone was arrested while the ink, purchased at a cost of RM2 million, was destroyed.”

He adds the EC should strive to be independent and ensure incumbent politicians do not use government machinery for campaigning.

Disappointment of the decade: Pak Lah as fifth prime minister

By Justin Ong - The Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 30 — “Don’t work for me, work with me.”

That one sentence heralded what was supposed to have been a New Age for Malaysians. After over two decades of iron-fisted rule by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, a prime minister who cared about what the country thinks was exactly what the doctor ordered.

Most Malaysians thought as much.

Together with the promise of a softer approach towards running the country was Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s image as “Mr Clean”. An image that he played up further by vowing to come down hard on a culture of corruption so entrenched that, far from being a crime, it was treated as an entitlement.

More than just giving Pak Lah — as he is popularly known — the benefit of the doubt, Malaysians handed him the keys to the country. In Election 2004, Barisan Nasional was given its most convincing mandate yet, winning 198 out of the 220 parliamentary seats. Whatever gains the opposition made during the 1998 Anwar Ibrahim debacle was all but wiped out.

But despite the overwhelming support of the electorate, it did not take long for it to be obvious that instead of using this mandate to implement policies that might have taken the country somewhere, anywhere, Pak Lah seemed content to rest on his laurels.

An administration paralysed by indecision, it was painful to watch what was essentially the most powerful man in the country being unable — or unwilling — to decide which direction the country should be heading. Instead, Malaysians were treated to mere rhetoric.

If ever there was an example of how indecision can be as harmful — and perhaps even more so — than bad decisions, this was it. National policy — when they made any — seemed to change on a whim, before being reversed soon after if objections were raised.

Pak Lah's years will be remembered as a lost opportunity to reform Malaysia. - File pic

Dr Mahathir, “recalcitrant” as he was, was at least decisive. And once he made up his mind, for better or worse, he stuck by it. Pak Lah, in contrast, ruled with all the consistency of a limp noodle. And before long, some quarters even began pining for the return of his predecessor.

Anecdotal accounts now seem to suggest Pak Lah was more than happy to let the country run itself, rather than be bothered with the minutiae of administrating the day-to-day affairs of the nation.

It also did not bode well that the man who was in charge of the country brought more than a metaphorical meaning to the phrase “sleeping on the job”. In any case, rather than running itself, the country was quickly running aground.

Besides residing over periods of harsh “unofficial” inflation, when the rakyat was increasingly feeling the pinch yet kept being told that everything was, is, and ever will be all right, it was also obvious that Pak Lah was failing miserably at his earlier promise of combating national graft.

Not only was he not doing much to cut down on corruption, merciless insinuations and accusations of cronyism by Dr Mahathir also ripped Abdullah’s “Mr Clean” reputation to shreds. Allegations of corruption in the UN Oil for Food programme certainly didn’t help matters. Nor the unfortunate discovery of a nuclear smuggling network involving Scomi Group.

Given carte blanche to run the country, Pak Lah chose to play the bureaucrat at a time when the country needed a strong steward to guide it into uncharted waters. Promises of fighting corruption, an Islam Hadhari that no one understands till today, and stillborn economic progress all lie in the wake of possibly the country’s most ineffectual prime minister to date.

What had started with so much potential ended as a major letdown. Hounded out of office by the man who put him there and the man who would be there, Pak Lah cut a lonely and forlorn figure in his final days.

In the end, Pak Lah's years will be remembered as a lost opportunity to reform Malaysia by a man who was paralysed by indecision and manacled to the status quo demands of his own political party.

Latif: RPK has sponsors

(The Star) - The person or organisation sponsoring Malaysia Today editor Raja Petra Kamaruddin’s stay in London is “somebody that he constantly supports in his articles”, said Umno supreme council member Datuk Dr Abdul Latif Ahmad.

He alleged that the reason for sponsoring Raja Petra – commonly known as RPK – was due to him being “special” to the particular individual or group.

“How can a bankrupt man afford to stay in a luxury apartment and use a foreign passport?

“He is obviously financed by someone and I am wondering if other bloggers are being sponsored as well,” said Dr Abdul Latif yesterday.

He was commenting on Raja Petra who is suspected to have exited Malaysia using a foreign passport.

It was recently reported that he is currently holed up at the posh Trinity Court Apartments in Glou­cester Terrace, Bayswater in London.

Dr Abdul Latif also likened Raja Petra’s escape from Malaysia to a Hollywood spy movie, in which passports were given to secret agents in order for them to hide out in other countries.

“We can tell who Raja Petra supports by reading his blog. It is somebody he is aligned to or perhaps he is being used by this person or organisation,” he said.

Dr Abdul Latif urged the police and Immigration Department to intensify their probe in exposing the sponsor’s identity.

He also claimed that other bloggers could be part of a syndicate to tarnish the country’s good name but that only Raja Petra was special enough to have been sponsored on an overseas trip.

Dr Abdul Latif said that although there was freedom of speech in the country, bloggers should not “force” people to accept their views.

“When others oppose their views, the bloggers accuse them of not being democratic. There must be a balance,” he added.

What is Dr Mahathir hinting at?

By Yong Min Wei, The Edge

Former premier Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad has hit out twice in less than two weeks at Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak's administration although the latter was instrumental in bringing him back to Umno earlier this year.

Dr Mahathir's occasional vocal criticisms of Najib are not new but a succession of salvos within a short space of time would surely raise some eyebrows in the prime minister's nine-month administration which might potentially see a cabinet reshuffle towards the end of the first quarter next year.

Some may question whether Dr Mahathir's remarks would have any bearing on the fate of the cabinet ministers despite all ministries having submitted their key performance indicator (KPI) reports on time for evaluation.

The former premier, who has been critical of Western powers, in mid-December expressed disappointment about what he perceived as a change in Malaysia's foreign policy to one of being pro-US after Kuala Lumpur's envoy to Vienna was recalled for voting against an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resolution criticising Iran's nuclear programme.

Dr Mahathir, who was irked by Wisma Putra's decision, commented that previously, Malaysia had defended countries oppressed by the US but was now backing the US in oppressing Iran instead.

According to him, the US and Israel continued to use nuclear weapons and were using depleted uranium from nuclear weapons but Malaysia was not officially protesting such actions.

Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Anifah Aman, however, said Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Vienna Datuk Mohd Arshad M Hussain was recalled for consultations as his action in the voting process "was not in accordance with the procedures of the government".

Then on Monday, Dr Mahathir called the administration's decision to replace the Russian-made MiG-29N jet fighters that were less than 20 years old as a waste of money.

"Many other countries, including India, are using this aircraft. Are they not able to use their MiG-29 more than 20 years? Have they also condemned the MiGs as early as this?" Dr Mahathir said in his blog posting.

He opined that although the Russian military aircraft were cheaper than the American-made ones, a lot of money had been spent, adding that hundreds of millions of ringgit would be lost if the MiGs were now condemned.

Dr Mahathir pointed out that with the sale and purchase of aircraft, the government could provide large benefits in profits to the middlemen, and questioned whether the interests of middlemen were influencing the decision to buy new replacements.

"I believe there are ways to overhaul fighters and other aircraft. Why can't we repair the MiG-29? If we cannot, the Russians may be able to. Maybe the Indians also can," he added.

"If fighter jets costing hundreds of millions can only last 20 years, it would be better we do not have fighter aircraft," said the 84-year-old former prime minister.

The government had in June announced the phasing out of 18 units of MiG-29Ns, which were bought from Russia for US$380 million (RM1.27 billion) in 1994 and delivered the following year. The package, which included training and spare parts, cost US$1.6 billion.

The move to phase out the MiG fighter jets is said to have been able to save the government RM260 million a year in maintenance cost.

Early this month, Defence Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said the MiG-29N would be phased out by next year and that the government had shortlisted aircraft from five countries to replace them.

"The new asset to replace the MiGs will be the multi-role combat aircraft, which is cost-efficient and can be used for at least 20 years," said Ahmad Zahid, adding that the MiG-29N would be sold "lock, stock and barrel" and that two companies were keen to buy them.

Dr Mahathir's latest salvo was on the backdrop of ongoing investigation into the theft of the two Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) F-5E fighter jet engines, worth a total of RM50 million.

Dr Mahathir had also recently traded barbs with Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz over the cabinet's decision to overhaul the national civics bureau (BTN) courses, resulting in the minister branding him "father of all racism" for defending BTN.

In April, the former premier singled out Nazri as one of those "unsavoury characters" that Najib had appointed into his cabinet.

When Najib took over the reins of power from Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi earlier this year, some political analysts believed that Dr Mahathir could actually become a liability to the current leadership.

It was argued then that Najib could be torn between accommodating Dr Mahathir's requests and direction, and coming up with his own decisions and policies.

Malaysia no longer “Tanah Melayu”,we're all citizens of Bumi Malaysia now. Notes dedicated to Teo Beng Hock

The idea of “Tanah Melayu” must be reflected upon — of its relevancy and whether it is a kind of ideological thinking that will help develop a culture of peace or help nurture inter-racial hatred.
A REPUBLIC OF VIRTUE
Azly Rahman
http://azlyrahman-illuminations.blogspot.com/2009/12/azly-rahman-lecture-on-culture-and.html
I dedicate these notes to Teo Beng Hock, a young Malaysian who ought to be an inspiration to many wishing to call Malaysia home.

Because we have agreed to become a country rooted in a social contract that ought to give equality, equity, and equal opportunity to all who have given up their natural rights in exchange for “citizenship” and the rights of the State to tax them (with or without representation), we must recognize that Malaysia is for Malaysians. 1Malaysia concept must abolish all forms of discrimination and institionalize good diversity and affirmative action policies.

This will be the most humane perspective we ought to work towards in holding. What is needed is a system of check and balance that will ensure that each generation of Malaysians will progress without the trappings of mistrust, hatred, and institutionalized racism.

But first, we must all fight for the installation of this reality. Political will that will move this agenda of ethical liberalism must be harnessed and be made the driving force for social, cultural, educational, and psychological change.

The idea of “Tanah Melayu” must be reflected upon — of its relevancy and whether it is a kind of ideological thinking that will help develop a culture of peace or help nurture inter-racial hatred.

Communal politics is an old school thinking that cannot survive the wave of cosmopolitanism; just like the any idea that could not survive the inevitability of historical change propelled by changes in material condition and consciousness.

In Malaysia, the days of communal politics are numbered, however well it is packaged and propagandized. Multiculturalism, and in fact radical multiculturalism, or better still radical marhaenism is the next wave. Institutions that promote racism must be deconstructed and abolished; institutions that are funded by the ruling regime to ensure the hegemony of this or that race. Dismantle them before they become yet another layer of complexity in our consciousness; a layer that hides the structural violence inherent in a system of racism and false consciousness called “nationalistic history”.

The only permanent thing is change, as the Chinese philosopher and mystic Lao Tzu said. Man has no nature, what he has is history, said the Spanish philosopher Ortega Gasset.

And there will be beauty in this change if we know how to destroy the beast within.

I am reproducing an essay I wrote sometime ago on "New Bumiputeraism”

--
Time for new ‘bumiputera-ism’

… kini kita cuma tinggal kuasa
yang akan menentukan bangsa
hasil mengalir, ke tangan yang lain
pribumi merintih sendiri…


My loose translation of this 1980s propaganda song by the Biro Tata Negara reads:

“… political power is what we are only left with
one that will determine the fate of our nation
wealth of this nation flows into the hands of others
sons and daughters of the soil suffer in solace..."


I do not think we have a clear understanding of what the lyrics means. I doubt if the songwriter even understand what a ‘people's history of Malaya’ means.

History is a complex syntagmatic pattern of interplay between technology, ideology, culture, inscription and institutionalisation not easily reduced to simplistic lyrics as such sung to the tune of pre-war German-nationalistic-sounding compositions.

History is about the complex evolution of the ruling class who owns the technologies of control. As Marx would say, at every epoch it is the history of those who own the means of production that will be written and rewritten. The winners write history, the losers write poetry or study anthropology.

Back to the lyrics. After more than 50 years of independence, who is suffering in Malaysia? Who has become wealthy? Who has evolved into robber barons?

Language of power and ideology is at play in those lyrics. The definition of ‘bumiputera’ is at play. It has become a problematic word in this age of deconstructionism; an age wherein as the poet WB Yeats said, “the centre cannot hold”.

Rock musicians will recall the Scorpions’ famous song ‘Winds of Change’ to serenade the fall of the Berlin Wall and the beginning of the breakdown of the Soviet Empire. We have to face the ‘wrath’ of the word.

Process of rebirth


There is an old Malay practice in Johor of renaming a child ‘Buang’ if his given name does not ‘suit’ him. My grand-uncle who passed away in the early 1970s had ‘Buang’ as a name. His old name did not suit him. He was often sick when he was a child ‘carrying’ his old name. Buang means ‘discard’. I would call it with a more noble word ‘reconceptualisation’, so that we may now talk about the ‘reconceptualisation of bumiputera-ism’.

Several semesters ago, when I was lecturing an undergraduate class in African philosophy, using Chinhua Achebe's novel ‘Things Fall Apart’, I began to understand how similar my grand-uncle's predicament is with that of the main character , Okonkwo, of that great African novel. ‘The Lion King’ explained the concept even better.

The name ‘bumiputera’ has to undergo ‘reconceptualisation’. The Indonesians had their process of ‘Buang-isation’ perhaps as Bung Karno (Soekarno) had envisioned. It has to undergo ‘rebirth’ or karma, as the Hindus would say.

We indulge in this ritual called ‘election’, another problematic word, commissioned to be executed ‘fairly’. When we are done with the general election, when we have shaken up the illusionary foundation of race that define ‘bumiputera-ism’, when we have begun to realise that it id the unseen hands of local and international corporate-crony-crypto-conspicuous-consuming capitalist class that is corrupting our material, emotional, ideological and spiritual landscape, we will start our post-mortem session on this process of ‘Buang-isation’ or ‘reconceptualisation’ of this idea of ‘bumiputera-ism’.

But the present regime cannot perform this process of Malaysian ‘divining’ and ‘discarding’. It cannot conduct this ‘Buang-isation’ ceremony because it no longer possess a good spiritual core. Its "vegetative soul", as the Islamic philosopher Professor Syed Naguib Alatas would call it, is too calloused with the carcinogens of corruption that its "rational soul" is forever lost and transported into the yuga (spiritual age) of this materially corrupt world - the kali yuga.

The ceremony must be performed by a group of philosopher-rulers whose idealism lies in the establishment of a 'republic of virtue'; one that drives its economic foundation from the accumulation of ‘spiritual and metaphysical’ rather than the material capital. ‘Das Kapital’ of the spiritual accumulation of wealth will be the product of this divination. Georg Hegel would agree with this idea of spiritual revolution. It cannot be performed by investment bankers-cum-politicians.

Names connote and denote something. Words, Pinker or Lacan or any of the bio-semioticians/linguistic anthropologists would say, carry metaphors and manifestations of history, material, power, knowledge and ideology. Worse still these words become institutions and become institutionalised into architectures of power and control.

Writers such as Lewis Mumford and Jacques Ellul have analysed this phenomena of architectures of power as these structure relate to the nature of Man within the context of the language in which he/she is situated.

‘Bumiputera’ is one such word. A problematic word. A word that assumes race and religion as one. To say that a Malay is generally a Muslim and hence a 'bumiputera' and therefore have special rights and privileges is an imprecise way of explaining a concept. It is an old-school approach to defining that word.

We must find ways to enrich the concept better so that it will become inclusive. Who toils for the soil? Labour, more than language, seems to be more a more linguistically just way to look at the definition of bumiputera and how we will go about the ‘Buangi-sation’ process.

We need a premise for this process though. Let’s begin with this phrase: “We hold these truths to be self-evident and Divine-ly sanctioned that All Malaysians are created equal and that they are endowed by their Creator the inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, happiness, justice and social equality… and we shall resoundingly declare that from now on we will be constructed as equal and be called ‘the new bumiputera’...

Sounds like a Rousseauin, Lockean, and Jeffersonian ideal locked in one, with a Malaysian ethos as its foundation. Sounds like what the Quran, Bible, Bhagavad Gita, Sutras, Puranas, Tao Te' Chng , Granth Sahib and Tibetan Book of the Dead would advocate.

That can be our premise for this radical change. Now the second stage of the ‘Buang-isation’ process can begin.

Critique the ideology

We must do something different to ourselves if we are to move to the next level of evolution as Malaysians.

Let us reconstruct the old concept of ‘bumiputera’ so that we will have a better foundation in preparation for a redefinition in the Federal Constituition - so that the constitution can now protect all rather that the few. Isn't democracy for the powerful few only good for plutocracy?

Yes - who is a ‘bumiputera’? After more than 50 years this term should have evolved and changed. The base and superstructure, the ideology and material foundation, and the body and spirit of this nation-state called Malaysia have changed.

The old definition has run its course. It is fine to see this as the right time to change. We must remember that words get refined and redefined in the course of history. Ask any linguist in any Malaysian university.

Words like democracy, freedom, justice and equality get reconceptualised after every social revolution. Words like Malays, Indians, Chinese, East and West Malaysians used as classification systems are good during the colonial period and in the early years of independence. They have lost their connotative and denotative power as pass the 50th year of independence.

Language is reality - words become flesh, inscriptions become institutions.

Redefine what ‘bumiputera’ means, so that we will not be forced to sing more propaganda songs.

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Najib Razak: A New Prime Minister Facing an Uncertain Future

Reading a booklet from Barry Wain, ‘Najib’s Challenge: Glory or Oblivion’ published by Research for Social Advancement (Refsa), it gave us an understanding that the newly appointed Prime Minister has a lot of hard work to do to gather the support of the people.

Being a politician who have faced pressures from the oppositions and bad impressions from the international media, he must find a way, urgently, to arrest the erosion in the government’s electoral appeal, or he will make history as the man who led one of the world’s longest-governing parties to defeat.

Moreover, Najib brings to the job so much political baggage that it has threatened to derail his prime ministerial ambitions. He has been linked to a Mongolian woman, 28, who was shot and blown up with specialized C4 plastic explosives in Malaysia in 2006. The woman’s former lover, an adviser to Najib, was cleared of ordering her death in a protracted court case that drew harsh public criticism and left vital questions unanswered. Two members of an elite police bodyguard unit assigned to Najib, who were asked by the adviser to “do something” about the woman because she was blackmailing him, had to answer murder charges.

Barry who is Writer-in-Residence at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies also mentioned how well the allegations on Najib’s corruption history. For example, the 114.96 million euros “coordination and support services” fee for Malaysia’s purchase in 2002 of two new Scorpene and one reconditioned Agosta submarine for 1.04 billion euros was paid to Perimekar Sdn. Bhd. Perimekar at the time was owned by a company called K.S. Ombak Laut Sdn Bhd.

UMNO, of course, is not Najib’s only immediate concern. With limited experience in finance, he must prepare to steer Malaysia through the global recession that is engulfing the region. He also is under pressure to address the extremely sensitive issue of affirmative action, still known colloquially by its original name, the New Economic Policy (NEP), which is a source of acute unhappiness among not just ethnic Chinese and Indians, but also increasing numbers of Malays without UMNO connections.

Significantly, it was when Najib was acting head of UMNO Youth in 1987 that he sounded a discordant racial note, which raised questions about him in the minds of non-Malays and dogged him for years. It came as communal tension had been building for weeks and he led a huge rally in Kuala Lumpur to confront what was perceived as a Chinese threat to Malay special rights. In the air were ethnic grievances on both sides, though the immediate issue was the government appointment of non-Mandarin-speaking Chinese to administrative posts in Chinese-medium primary schools. As party barriers were overrun by ethnicity, two National Front members, the Malaysian Chinese Association and Gerakan, joined with the opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP) on occasions in defence of Chinese interests.17 Najib was photographed at the demonstration with several other UMNO Youth leaders, wearing white headbands with their arms raised, above a banner naming four high-profile opponents, all ethnic Chinese and Indian (though one was a Muslim) and the words, “destroy them”. Followers waved other banners bearing racially provocative slogans. “Our elders should not compromise anymore”, said Najib. “We are simply fed up.”

Although Najib pronounced himself happy with the response to his direct appeal to the public, it did little to improve his image. Three months after the website appeared and three months before Najib was due to replace Abdullah, only 41 per cent of Malaysians thought he would be a good prime minister. Even the inept Abdullah had a 46 per cent approval rating in the poll, conducted by the independent Merdeka Centre. Voters were worried about the usual panoply of issues: the economy, race relations and equality, corruption and governance. After waiting more than three decades for his moment to lead the nation, Najib Razak is taking over “without the burden of overly high expectations”, as one report put it, but burdened on almost every other score.