Category: Politik

  • Alfian Sa’at: “If There Is A Committee To Certify The ‘Chineseness’ Of Candidates, What Kinds Of Criteria Should We Expect?”

    Alfian Sa’at: “If There Is A Committee To Certify The ‘Chineseness’ Of Candidates, What Kinds Of Criteria Should We Expect?”

    I have so many questions.
    Is a biologically Chinese person adopted into an Indian family still Chinese?
    But what do we mean by ‘biologically’?
    You can adopt a child of a different race in Singapore.
    But can the child ‘adopt’ whatever race it wants to?
    Are Chindians considered Chinese?
    Is a Chindian with a Chinese father considered more Chinese than one with a Chinese mother?
    Because patrilineal descent?
    If a Chindian is raised only by an Indian mother in the absence of a father can this person remove ‘Chinese’ from the IC and replace it with ‘Indian’?
    If a Chindian is raised by a Filipino domestic worker in the absence of both parents who are working overseas, what is this person’s race?

    If there is a committee to certify the ‘Chineseness’ of candidates, what kinds of criteria should we expect?
    Should this person be able to speak Mandarin?
    Should ‘bananas’ be disqualified?
    Is ‘banana’ a slur?
    How about OCBC–‘Orang Cina Bukan Cina’?
    Can something be a slur when used against an Anglophone elite who wield immense political and economic power in Singapore?
    How about Peranakans?
    Which makes them more Chinese: if they introduce themselves as ‘Peranakan Chinese’ or as ‘Chinese Peranakans’?

    And what if the candidate is a Chinese Muslim?
    Who was featured as one of the top Malay PSLE students in Berita Harian, because of a ‘Muslim-sounding’ name.
    And received a MENDAKI scholarship.
    But then attended a SAP school.
    And decided to change his name by deed poll to something more ‘Chinese-sounding’.
    And was then featured in Lianhe Zaobao as one of the top Chinese ‘O’ Level students.
    But still made CPF contributions to the Mosque Building and Mendaki Fund.
    Then married a Chinese Christian woman under civil marriage.
    And then had kids, one of whom wanted to be Muslim, another Christian, and another a Jedi warrior.
    If this person presents himself in front of an esteemed panel of people who are to certify his Chineseness, what will happen?
    I hope at the very least their heads explode.

    I think some of the questions above are ridiculous.
    I think ultimately there is something absurd about the idea of race–or specifically the idea of racial categorisation.
    And honestly I’m quite tired of all the ink spilled on trying to define Mdm Halimah’s race.
    Because the slipperiness and porosity and contradictions of ‘race’ are not specific to Malays or Indians.
    To be exempt from having your racial identity undergo such obsessive vivisection under the public glare is surely one of the manifestations of majority privilege.
    And to be honest the feeling is horrible, as if there is an ‘authentic performance’ of one’s race, or even worse, that one can be viewed as an exemplary or illustrative specimen of one’s racial species.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at

  • Poem For Singapore’s State Of Affairs

    Poem For Singapore’s State Of Affairs

    I just wrote this poem for my dearest family and friends. Like if you enjoyed reading it. Look the other way if you didnt.

    LIFE’S GOOD. JUST LOOK THE OTHER WAY

    It’s easy to lead a good life
    One that is not filled with strife
    Hop along go where the wind blows
    Richly adorned by things that glows
    Queue for your food and chope your seats
    Trust the government and praise their feats
    Look the other way when they cheat
    Because if you see it will mean defeat
    Convince yourself that it’s not all gloom
    Sleep tight and embrace the moral doom
    Change the laws to suit the government
    Of course to the people’s ultimate detriment
    You are so busy giving your life to make money
    You forget that living life is sweet as honey
    At elections your support leaves them humble
    But in real life costs continue to double
    Always silencing the disenting voices
    Stripping you of your democratic choices
    Let’s go on many fancy holidays
    One of many enjoyable getaways
    Why do we care how the country is run
    Just make sure my BTO is done
    Power corrupts ordinarily
    Absolute power corrupts absolutely
    The pride of a nation in sports is bought from abroad
    To our foreign friends welcome aboard
    We the citizens won’t mind
    We just say nevermind
    Small rights are gradually stripped
    Aiya, it’s better to keep your mouth zipped
    Why do you care what the government does?
    I really don’t see what’s the big fuss
    Pay more for water and anything on the shelve
    You don’t need much space for everything else
    Accuse your citizens of being racist
    Then let off lightly a foreign rapist
    Send the small fries to the gallows
    Wine and dine with the rich fellows
    Our world class transport system is plagued by signal fault
    Alamak this month instalment I cannot default
    Foreign students take loans to study here
    Runaway with unpaid loan without fear
    Must sue if integrity questioned
    But if brother, lets keep this unmentioned
    We are champions of the small things
    Oblivious to the injustices life brings
    There is only one thing left to do
    Best you start preparing without much ado
    Come on man, steal your neighbour’s lunch, they say
    Easy. because most of us are always looking the other way

     

    Source: K.P.

  • Shanmugam: “Definisi kelas pertengahan bagi saya adalah memiliki flat sekurang-kurangnya empat bilik berharga purata $300,000”

    Shanmugam: “Definisi kelas pertengahan bagi saya adalah memiliki flat sekurang-kurangnya empat bilik berharga purata $300,000”

    KEMAJUAN yang ditunjukkan masyarakat Melayu/Islam Singapura boleh menjadikan mereka contoh kilauan bagi semua masyarakat Islam di dunia, kata Menteri Ehwal Dalam Negeri merangkap Undang-Undang, Encik K. Shanmugam. Namun, beliau menggariskan tiga cabaran yang boleh menghambat kemajuan itu termasuk ideologi radikal dan pengganasan yang perlu dikekang. Secara umum, beliau berkata bahawa kemajuan masyarakat Melayu dalam pelbagai ukur tara dari segi bidang pendidikan dan ekonomi merupakan satu contoh yang baik kepada masyarakat Islam lain di dunia.

    “Kita tidak memberikan mereka ikan tetapi mengajar bagaimana memancing. Kita mengambil laluan lebih lama, tetapi kini, kita mempunyai masyarakat yang utuh, lebih berpelajaran, lebih banyak aset dan bersedia menghadapi masa depan,” kata beliau, ketika berucap di Kopi Talk, satu sesi dialog Keharmonian dan Daya Tahan anjuran Persatuan Rakyat (PA), yang dihadiri sekitar 400 pemimpin akar umbi dan kakitangan Melayu/Islam daripada PA di The Grassroots’ Club malam tadi. Dalam bidang pendidikan, peratusan murid Melayu darjah satu yang meneruskan pendidikan ke peringkat posmenengah berganda daripada 45 peratus pada 1995 kepada 93 peratus pada 2015. Mereka yang akhirnya mendapat ijazah dan diploma meningkat daripada 15 peratus pada 2010 kepada 21 peratus pada 2015.

    Lebih ramai Melayu bekerja sebagai karyawan, pengurus, eksekutif dan teknisyen (PMET) – daripada 7 peratus pada 1980 kepada 28 peratus pada 2010. Dari segi pemilikan rumah, hampir 90 peratus keluarga Melayu memiliki rumah mereka sendiri dan lebih 70 peratus tinggal di flat empat bilik atau lebih besar termasuk rumah privet. “Definisi kelas pertengahan bagi saya adalah memiliki flat sekurang-kurangnya empat bilik berharga purata $300,000. Selepas subsidi, tujuh dalam setiap 10 anggota masyarakat Melayu memiliki ekuiti bernilai $150,000 hingga $200,000. Ini merupakan satu pencapaian,” katanya. Malah, secara median, pendapatan bulanan keluarga Melayu per kapita telah meningkat berganda sejak 1990.

    Menurut Encik Shanmugam, kemajuan itu dicapai hasil usaha berterusan masyarakat Melayu, pertubuhan Melayu/Islam dan pemerintah. Meskipun kemajuan itu menggalakkan, Encik Shanmugam menggariskan tiga cabaran utama yang dihadapi masyarakat Melayu/Islam Singapura iaitu pengaruh fahaman radikal dan pengganasan yang merupakan satu keprihatinan yang perlu ditangani, membantu PMET Melayu/Islam yang kehilangan pekerjaan mendapatkan semula pekerjaan, dan peratusan tinggi orang Melayu yang menyalah guna dadah dan meringkuk dalam penjara. Usaha membendung ideologi radikalisme amat penting kerana proses menjadi radikal semakin pantas, kata Encik Shanmugam.

    “Sebelum ISIS, masa yang diambil untuk menjadi radikal ialah 22 bulan, tetapi kini ia mengambil masa sembilan bulan. Malah, terdapat juga mereka yang menjadi radikal dalam tempoh satu hingga dua bulan. Bahkan, lebih ramai wanita yang menjadi radikal,” kata beliau. Minggu lalu, Kementerian Ehwal Dalam Negeri (MHA) mendedahkan bahawa Imran Kassim, 34 tahun, dikenakan Perintah Tahanan (OD) kerana cuba menyertai perjuangan bersenjata di luar negara, manakala Shakirah Begam Abdul Wahab, 23 tahun, dikenakan Perintah Sekatan (RO) kerana memulakan dan mengekalkan hubungan dengan pejuang pengganas asing. Bagi membantu PMET yang kehilangan pekerjaan, sebuah jawatankuasa dibentuk yang diketuai Setiausaha Parlimen (Ehwal Dalam Negeri), Encik Amrin Amin; dan Setiausaha Parlimen Kanan (Pendidikan merangkap Pembangunan Sosial dan Keluarga), Profesor Madya Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim.

    Encik Shanmugam juga menyuarakan keprihatinan mengenai peratusan Melayu yang tinggi yang menyalah guna dadah dan meringkuk dalam penjara. Lebih separuh atau 53 peratus individu yang ditangkap kerana salah guna dadah merupakan orang Melayu tahun lalu, meningkat daripada 32 peratus pada 2006. Pemerintah, katanya, akan terus menyokong masyarakat Melayu/Islam dan respons mereka terhadap cabaran-cabaran itu akan menentukan kejayaan mereka. “Kita mempunyai masyarakat Melayu yang berkeyakinan, rancak, moden dan dapat berintegrasi dengan masyarakat lain. Usaha itu masih belum selesai dan perlu diteruskan,” tambahnya.

     

    Source: Berita Harian

  • Chee Soon Juan: Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC By-Election Needed

    Chee Soon Juan: Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC By-Election Needed

    It is bad enough that the PAP has reserved the Presidential Election and that Mdm Halimah Yacob has become the President without a contest. At the same time, Mdm Halimah has left the Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC short of an MP and without a minority representative. Then the PAP says that there is no need for a by-election to fill her seat. This is an abuse of power. The PAP sees itself bigger than Singapore and continues to do as it pleases. Such unchecked control endangers the future of this nation.

    This is why the SDP has initiated legal action to ask the court to rule on the matter of a by-election when an MP vacates his/her seat.
    http://yoursdp.org/…/sdp_files_lawsuit_agai…/2017-09-13-6194 But such action entails financial costs and no one party has the means to shoulder such an expense by itself.

    We, therefore, call on all Singaporeans to contribute to this cause. Please do your part and financially support the effort to stop the PAP from continuing its abuse of power. If everyone does a little, our load will lighten and the role of holding the PAP accountable made more effective. So please donate as well as help us spread this message far and wide. Remember, we’re all in this together. You can do so online, through bank transfers or cheques. Please click here: http://yoursdp.org/index/donate/0-12

     

    Source: Chee Soon Juan

  • Dr Tan Cheng Bock: “Walkover Troubles Singaporeans”

    Dr Tan Cheng Bock: “Walkover Troubles Singaporeans”

    WALKOVER TROUBLES SINGAPOREANS

    My congratulations to President-elect Mdm Halimah Yacoob. Today she returned unopposed and will occupy the most controversial presidency in the history of Singapore. I wish her well. Singaporeans are, however, unhappy with the walkover as reported in the BBC: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-41237318

    I think one reason is this: when the Commission recommended scrapping the Presidential elections and reverting to an appointed Presidency, the Government White Paper rejected the idea. They explained it was important for citizens to give the Presidency their “popular” and “direct” mandate.

    In PE 2011, I stood for elections because I did not want a walkover. In fact, I recall that in 1993, the Government’s preferred candidate was Ong Teng Cheong. Everyone knew he would win. But Dr Goh Keng Swee still went out of his way to persuade Mr Chua Kim Yeow to stand for elections. Why? To prevent a walkover and give citizens the dignity of expressing their choice.

    But for PE 2017, the Government did not put up another Malay candidate aside from Mdm Halimah. Instead, 2 independent candidates, Salleh Marican and Farid Khan, valiantly stepped up. Everyone knew Mdm Halimah would win. Still, we looked forward to a poll to tell the Government what we thought about the elections. However, the PEC rejected the 2 men (contrast PE 2011 where the PEC permitted Tan Kin Lian and Tan Jee Say to contest via the deliberative track). As a result, we have a disappointing walkover.

    People now feel muzzled and angry. Because when you take away our right to vote, you take away our political voice. You tell us that our choice does not matter. PE 2017 has been a quiet affair. But there is now a deafening silence awakening the nation. We did not get a chance to speak with our vote this round, but the time will come. And when it does, it will be thunderous. Of this I am sure.

     

    Source: Dr. Tan Cheng Bock