Tag: Barisan Nasional

  • ‘Ketuanan Melayu’ As It Is Practiced In Malaysian Politics

    ‘Ketuanan Melayu’ As It Is Practiced In Malaysian Politics

    At UMNO’S recent general assembly, the trope of “Ketuanan Melayu” rang loud and clear yet again through the halls of the Putra World Trade Centre, drowning out Prime Minister Najib Razak’s “1Malaysia” in the same way that it drowned out Mr Abdullah Badawi’s “Islam Hadhari” not too long ago, and Tun Mahathir Mohamad’s “Bangsa Malaysia” before that.

    What exactly does Ketuanan Melayu mean? Furthermore, what does it imply?

    At first glance, the meaning of Ketuanan Melayu, in the Malaysian cultural and historical context, is innocent enough. According to school textbooks, Ketuanan Melayu is defined as “the passion for anything related to the Malay race, such as political rights, language, cultural heritage and customs, as well as homeland”.

    Much in the same vein, the influential Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (Institute for Language and Literature) defines it as the right to rule or control a country (negara), state (negeri), or a district (daerah) on the basis of the principle of sovereignty (kedaulatan).

    Its root word, tuan, in this context means “lord” or “master” (in relation to a servant) or “owner” (in relation to property).

    Hence, literally, Ketuanan Melayu means Malay sovereignty, or the lordship claim of the Malays on the tanah Melayu – the land belonging to the Malays and everything in/on it.

    Underlying this logic is the romanticism of Malay heritage: The Malay Peninsula (Semenanjung Tanah Melayu) is regarded as the ancestral land of the Malays.

    As Dr Mahathir himself once wrote in The Malay Dilemma: “The Malays are the original or indigenous people of Malaya and the only people who can claim Malaya as their one and only country. In accordance with practice all over the world, this confers on the Malays certain inalienable rights over the forms and obligations of citizenship which can be imposed on citizens of non-indigenous origin.”

    It is important to also stress that while the term “Ketuanan Melayu” itself does not appear in the Constitution, its underlying logic of according special rights to Malay interests is, in fact, constitutionally sanctioned.

    According to the Federal Constitution of 1957, while non-Malays were granted citizenship rights, Article 153 decrees that it is the responsibility of the king (Yang di Pertuan Agong) to safeguard the special position of the Malays and bumiputera (indigenous communities) while also taking into account the “legitimate interests” of other communities.

    In this way, the “special position” of the Malays and bumiputera are codified. It is by this token too, that Ketuanan Melayu and the sovereignty of the sultans become intertwined.

    In fact, such is the sanctity of the sovereign in the constellation of Malaysian politics, the country has nine sitting kings at any one time.

    All this is to say that Malay culture lies at the centre of Malaysian national culture, and it is the traditions (including the pomp and pageantry) of the traditional Islamic-Malay polity that shape the nature of governance and government in Malaysia today.

    Politics and myth-making

    Notwithstanding its rich cultural and historical legacy, a critical feature of contemporary discourse on Ketuanan Melayu is how the concept has been used to frame the relationship between Muslim Malays and non-Malay citizens of Malaysia.

    The currency of the narrative of Ketuanan Melayu lies not only in its stress on the rights of denizens or the essence of Malay statecraft, but also its portrayal of non-Malays.

    Indeed, notwithstanding its seemingly innocuous role in outlining the markers of Melayu (Malay) identity, the etymology of the discourse has come to set more store by its definition in relation to Malaysia’s other ethnic communities: It implies that Malays are self-referenced as “tuan” or “lords” and “masters” over other identities.

    More to the point, the rhetoric of Ketuanan Melayu espoused by Umno today, but also echoed in Malaysian textbooks, often casts non-Malays in a pejorative light and questions their citizenship, ergo, loyalty.

    Non-Malays are frequently described in Malay books as anak dagang, golongan pendatang, pendatang asing, or imigran, implying that they are sojourners with no loyalty to the land, foreigners, aliens, or immigrants as opposed to penduduk tempatan, or local inhabitants.

    For non-Malay Malaysians, the implications that follow are self-evident.

    Their position in relation to Malay rights whenever the issue of citizenship of non-Malays is discussed (if not questioned), as it unfortunately still is 57 years after independence, is delegitimised.

    Ketuanan Melayu then, becomes a narrative of special birthright and ethnic primacy – if not supremacy – that in the view of non-Malays, strikes at the very heart of attempts to envision a civic and pluralist conception of nationhood.

    Yet, amid the controversy that the usage of “Ketuanan Melayu” stirs up today in Malaysian discourses on identity and belonging, there is one mistaken assumption – that the essence of “Melayu”, or Malayness, is immutable. Perhaps, in a future piece, I will elaborate why this is not quite so.

    Communal identity has long been a fundamental organising principle of Malaysian politics and society. At the heart of the matter is how national identity in Malaysia is constructed around one ethnic and religious group, the Malay-Muslims.

    It is this optic through which Ketuanan Melayu must be viewed. Indeed, considering that the term itself does not even appear in the Federal Constitution, its emergence as, arguably, the most important and controversial concept in the Malaysian political lexicon is certainly remarkable.

    [email protected]

    The writer, Joseph Chinyong Liow, is dean and professor of comparative and international politics at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, and Lee Kuan Yew Chair in South-east Asia Studies at Brookings Institution.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Malaysian PM Najib Razak Calls Trip To Hawaii “Golf Diplomacy”

    Malaysian PM Najib Razak Calls Trip To Hawaii “Golf Diplomacy”

    KOTA BARU (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) – Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has explained that his private trip to Hawaii to meet US President Barack Obama was a diplomatic gesture that will benefit the country.

    Mr Najib said there was nothing unusual about the trip and described it as “golf diplomacy”.

    “This has been a common practice even by previous prime ministers including during Tunku Abdul Rahman’s administration.

    “I was personally invited by Obama and it is hard for me to turn it down as it has been scheduled much earlier,” he told a news conference at Sultan Ismail Petra Airport on Saturday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • MIC Wanita Chief: Tudung Ban Unnecessary

    MIC Wanita Chief: Tudung Ban Unnecessary

    A woman has a right to wear what she wants and a person’s attire should not restrict her from being employed.

    In stating so, MIC Wanita chief Mohana Muniandy said denying a woman a job due to her choice of attire was “really bad”, especially when it was worn for religious purposes.

    “Malaysia is moving forward with moderation and this requirement is extremist and unnecessary. It is just not logical,” she told The Rakyat Post when contacted.

    Mohana was commenting on a tweet by actor Datuk Rosyam Nor who alleged that a toy store had allegedly requested his daughter to remove her tudung as a requirement for employment, last Thursday.

    She also wondered why a toy store would enforce such a requirement when tudung-clad women are a normal sight in Malaysia.

    Yesterday, Puteri Umno chief Datuk Mas Ermieyati Samsudin slammed the toy shop, arguing that the action was against the rights of Muslims.

    She also said that it showed that there were still people who were narrow-minded about tudung-clad women and demanded that the outlet apologise.

    Meanwhile, the management of the toy shop, Hamleys Malaysia, had posted an official apology to the public on Facebook yesterday regarding the matter.

    The statement added that it did not have such a policy and welcomed any applicant, regardless of race and religion.

     

    Source: www.therakyatpost.com

  • ‘Corruption’ is First Word When Malaysians Think of Their Government, survey says

    ‘Corruption’ is First Word When Malaysians Think of Their Government, survey says

    KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 25 — Most Malaysians immediately think of “corruption” the moment they are asked to talk about their government, while “profit” comes to mind when thinking about corporations, an international survey has revealed.

    In the Corporate Perception Indicator 2014 survey jointly carried out by CNBC and Burson-Marsteller,1,076 Malaysians were asked the open-ended question of “What is the first thing that comes to the mind when you think of the government?”.

    The resulting answer from both Malaysia’s 1,001 general public and the 75 executives polled was “corruption”, which was also the most popular word in most of the 25 countries surveyed.

    This puts Malaysia in the company of the India, US, Brazil, Mexico, Columbia, UK, Spain and South Africa, while only the general public in neighbouring Indonesia, China, South Korea, Canada, Russia, UAE immediately linked “government” to “corruption”.

    In a similar open-ended question on corporations, the top answer for the 1,076 Malaysian respondents was “profit” – a word similarly shared by most Asians polled including those in Indonesia, India, Japan and executives in Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea.

    Malaysians polled in the survey also felt that small businesses were profit-driven.

    The general public in Malaysia trusted the government the most to steer the local economy at 33 per cent, while executives here placed their trust in corporations instead at 31 per cent.

    Most Malaysians also believed that the most important role for corporations is to strengthen the economy, with 44 per cent polled saying businesses had “just the right amount” of influence over the economy as opposed to firms wielding “too much” influence at 29 per cent.

    A high number or 59 per cent of Malaysians polled said it was good for corporations to be influential as this would help drive economic growth, with a whopping 70 per cent pointing to businesses as a “source of hope” for them.

    Out of all 25 countries, the Malaysians showed the strongest preference for multinationals at 43 per cent, while 37 per cent said it did not matter to them, with both those supporting domestic companies and who did not indicate a preference standing equally at 10 per cent.

    Malaysians polled also believe the news media to be the most socially responsible industry, with many saying that firms should direct their corporate social responsibility efforts towards social welfare.

    Malaysians picked heads of government out of 10 professions as both the most powerful and most respected people in society.

    The Corporate Perception Indicator 2014 survey was jointly carried out by CNBC and Burson-Marsteller through online questionnaires answered by over 25,000 people between June 28 and August 15 this year.

    The margins of error for the sample size in Malaysia of 1,001 members of the public and 75 high-ranking executives at companies employing more than 50 people are 3.10 per cent and 11.32 per cent respectively.

    Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/corruption-is-first-word-on-malaysians-minds-when-thinking-of-government-su

  • Failed Policies of UMNO Are to Blame For Certain Lazy Malays

    Failed Policies of UMNO Are to Blame For Certain Lazy Malays

    IT is wrong to single out one type of people as lazy and it does nothing to improve the situation, says Global Movement of Moderates (GMM) chief executive officer Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah.

    He was commenting on a speech by former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad who said that shamelessness and laziness are holding back Malays.

    “Being lazy is an attitude of some people. It happens everywhere and not only among Malays,” says Saifuddin.

    Instead, Saifuddin suggests that what is needed is to improve the attitude of all Malaysians, not just limiting such efforts to any one ethnic group, as well as positive encouragement.

    “We should celebrate successful people and motivate others to emulate them.

    “Continuously nagging people will not make any difference,” says the former Deputy Education Minister.

    PKR deputy information chief Sim Tze Tzin accuses Dr Mahathir of simply trying to cause provocation. He says failed policies have caused Malays to seem as though they are lazy.

    “Dr Mahathir is just trying to provoke Malay insecurity by comparing them with other people.

    “The Malays that I know, who work in Bayan Baru and Bayan Lepas factories, are among the best in the world.

    “They are hard-working and disciplined and they come from all over the country,” says Sim, who is also the MP for Bayan Baru.

    He says this showed that Malays are not lazy and could stand toe-to-toe or shoulder-to-shoulder with any people in the world.

    However, he says failed policies, including practices initiated by Dr Mahathir himself, are to blame in cases where certain Malays could be seen as lazy.

    “His policies are what has made certain Malays very lazy, such as cronies who get projects and immediately pass them out to contractors.

    “This is the policy laid out by Dr Mahathir that made some elite Malays very lazy,” says Sim.

    But, he adds, that it is not only the elites that have lost out in some way due to failed policies but also the poor.

    “Failed policies of Umno are destroying their economic prospects. Cheap labour from Indonesia or Myanmar are suppressing the low wages of Malaysians, of low-income families, the majority of whom are Malays.

    “At the end of the day, because of cheap labour, they give up.

    “Not because they are lazy, but because of the cheap wages, they cannot sustain themselves,” says Sim, adding that low pay provides a “disincentive” to work.

    “Don’t blame the Malays, blame the policies,” says Sim in conclusion.

    Source: http://www.therakyatpost.com/allsides/2014/09/15/malays-lazy-blame-failed-policies-malays/#ixzz3DRO8UjBB

    Read more: http://www.therakyatpost.com/allsides/2014/09/15/malays-lazy-blame-failed-policies-malays/#ixzz3DRNmk57x