Tag: Malays

  • David Tan Tells Government To Trust Talented Malays

    David Tan Tells Government To Trust Talented Malays

    During my Raffles Institution (RI) teaching days, I had the privilege to have many Malay boys as my students. Many came from poor homes although they were bright, intelligent and very polite. Many of them loved to play soccer but after each game, were too poor to buy drinks to quench their thirst. I helped them out in small ways by forking out part of my meagre salary to buy bottles of syrup drinks so they could mix with tap water to drink. I took many photographs with them during those RI days. Most of them were very good looking and talented in soccer, music and art.

    I was extremely delighted when one of the boys, now a pilot with SIA invited me to one of his daughters’ wedding. Many of my ex-RI Malay students were invited too. I had a great time with them but it took me a while to recognize some of them. I was so proud of what they are today. Among them are senior government officials, diplomats, pilots, heads of organizations and other professionals. They have proven that race is never a part or component of one’s success.

    They are the evidence of a responsible minority group of Singaporeans who have succeeded and contributed to our nation. One of the feedback from them included their unhappiness over being ‘passed over’ for Officer Cadets’ courses when they were called up for national service. Most of them possessed the necessary physique, academic and moral qualities to be selected for the Officer Cadets’ course but ended up being clerks, storekeepers or performing other unimportant administrative tasks in the army. What a shame and a waste of talent! This lack of trust by our current government must be changed and rectified for our minority races.

    I am humbled by their remembrance and their respect for me. I am also extremely happy that many of them are in regular communication with me. Being a teacher has its rewards!

     

    *Article was written by David Tan and first appeared on http://singfirst.org/2014/11/16/david-tan-our-malay-students-are-under-utilised-and-under-nurtured/

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • French Company Produces Halal Test-Kits

    French Company Produces Halal Test-Kits

    PARIS: A French start-up is hoping to take a slice of the multi-billion Halal food market with a device allowing diners to find out within minutes whether a dish contains pork.

    Capital Biotech has received orders from as far afield as Turkey, Chile and Indonesia for its “Halal Test” which tests within 10 minutes whether a food contains pork meat, forbidden for Muslims and Jews.

    Launched only a fortnight ago, the company has won nearly 100,000 (US$135,000) in orders, a “surprise” according to co-founder Jean-Francois Julien.

    The company acknowledges that the test, a one-use device costing 6.90 euros (S$11.16), does not constitute a complete “Halal” test, which also requires information about how the animal was slaughtered. But it “allows you to dispel a one-off doubt, for example when you are on holiday or when a new “Halal” product hits the market,” said Julien.

    To use the device, the cautious diner mixes a small amount of food with hot water and inserts a small strip into the mixture. The strip tests for pork proteins and takes less than 10 minutes.

    France’s five million Muslims (the largest population in Europe) have been hit with food scandals – in 2011, “Halal” sausages were discovered to contain pork – and want to be sure they are not eating forbidden food, said Abbas Bendali from marketing firm Solis.

    Capital Biotech believes however that 70 percent of its sales will eventually come from professionals who want a quick way of testing whether food is suitable for non-pork eaters.

    Bendali said the cost of the device would inevitably deter individuals “at a time of economic crisis.” “It’s difficult to invest seven euros to test a bowl of pasta that costs three,” he said. Muslims are more reassured by “a genuine Halal certificate,” he said.

    A FIRST, BUT CAUTION

    But the firm is not limiting itself just to pork, hoping to make itself the firm of reference for tests on all types of food allergies. It intends to launch soon a range of tests for soya, egg or almonds – all potential allergens – in ready meals.

    The firm will then roll out tests for gluten, peanut or milk. In the long-run, the start-up plans to extend its quick-fire testing to pharmaceutical products. However, Faycal Bennatif, marketing director of the world’s top biological analysis group Eurofins, told AFP it was not down to the consumer to perform quality tests on food products.

    In the wake of the horsemeat scandal that rocked Europe last year, Eurofins has been inundated for requests to test meat products but has not developed a quick-fire test. “We work with DNA sequencing in the lab which is not at all the same method,” said Bennatif, adding he was “dubious” as to how efficient the new quick tests were.

    Capital Biotech’s “Halal tests” do not require authorisation to be launched on the market, estimated at 5.5 billion euros (US$6.8 billion) in France alone, although authorities will examine the reliability of the testing method.

    Expert in allergens, Jocelyne Just said the tests were a “first” but should be treated with caution “in the sense that a patient can be allergic to one food form but not another, for example to raw milk but not pasteurised.”

    As for Capital Biotech, the start-up already has its eye on the next market by securing domain names for “kosher tests”.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Malaysia Sacrifices Talent To Keep Malay Race On Top, Says Lee Kuan Yew

    Malaysia Sacrifices Talent To Keep Malay Race On Top, Says Lee Kuan Yew

    Malaysia is prepared to lose its talent through its race-based policies in order to maintain the dominance of one race, said Lee Kuan Yew in his new book which was launched tonight in Singapore.

    And although Malaysia has acknowledged the fact that they are losing these talents and is making an attempt to lure Malaysians back from overseas, such efforts may be too little too late, he said.

    “This is putting the country at a disadvantage. It is voluntarily shrinking the talent pool needed to build the kind of society that makes use of talent from all races.

    “They are prepared to lose that talent in order to maintain the dominance of one race,” he said in the 400-page book called “One Man’s View of the World” (pic).
    It features conversations between Lee and his long-time admirer, Helmut Schmidt, former leader of West Germany. They discussed world affairs when Schmidt visited Singapore last year.

    In the book, Lee pointed out that Malaysia is losing ground and giving other countries a head start in the external competition.

    About 400,000 of some one million Malaysians overseas are in Singapore, according to the World Bank.

    When announcing the five-year plan for Malaysia, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said in Parliament in 2011, the government would set up a talent corporation to lure some 700,000 Malaysians working abroad back to the country.

    But in his book, Lee said the demographic changes in Malaysia will lead to a further entrenchment of Malay privileges.

    He noted that in the last 10 years, since the enactment of the New Economic Policy, the proportion of Malaysian Chinese and Indians of the total population has fallen dramatically.

    “The Chinese made up 35.6 percent of the population in 1970. They were down to 24.6 percent at the last census in 2010. Over that same period, the Indian numbers fell from 10.8 percent to 7.3 percent,” he said.

    He added, “40 percent of our migrants are from Malaysia.

    “Those with the means to do so leave for countries farther afield. In the early days, Taiwan was a popular destination among the Chinese-educated.

    “In recent years, Malaysian Chinese and Indians have been settling in Europe, America and Australia. Some have done very well for themselves, such as Penny Wong, Australia’s current finance minister.

    “Among those who have chosen to remain in Malaysia, some lack the means to leave and others are making a good living through business despite the discriminatory policies. Many in this latter class partner with Malays who have connections.”

    World Bank data for 2012 showed that the island republic has raced ahead of its neighbour, with gross domestic product per capita of US$51,709 compared with Malaysia’s US$10,381.

    Najib had said Malaysia is set to become a high income developed nation as early as 2018, two years earlier than the targeted 2020.

    Lee said in his book the separation of Singapore and Malaysia in 1965 marked “the end of a different vision in Malaysia on the race issue”.

    He added, “Much of what has been achieved in Singapore could have been replicated throughout Malaysia. Both countries would have been better off.” – August 6, 2013.

    Source: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/malaysia-sacrifices-talent-for-dominance-of-one-race-says-kuan-yew#sthash.OPmvUQYk.dpuf

  • Fate of Malays Are Shaped By The Government

    Fate of Malays Are Shaped By The Government

    malay wedding

    Dr. Mahathir says the Malays are lazy. He says he has failed. After a lifetime trying to correct the Malay character, since the days he wrote his Malay Dilemma, Mahathir is a frustrated man. Either the Malay is irredeemable or Mahathir has the wrong prescriptions.

    The Malay is lazy compared with whom? There must be a measure. Because Mahathir is ashamed in front of the Chinese, then by extension, the Malay is lazy when compared to the Chinese.

    If so, why are the Chinese not lazy and the Malays lazy? To me this is not due to some innate cultural characteristics and – allow me to say it directly here at once – it’s due to the refusal of the Chinese to allow others to dictate their destiny. The Malays on the other hand have resigned to the fact that their destiny is shaped by others, notably the government.

    Before Umno, the Malays were as they were because centuries of living under feudal rule had shaped their childlike dependence. When Umno came, the mental bondage wasn’t eliminated but reinforced by the neo-feudalism that Umno practises.

    The Malays must now start believing that they are given this inalienable right to define their own lives, that responsibility over their wellbeing rests with themselves first and not defined by an extraneous entity like the government. The Malay is free to pursue his own personal interest without being prevented by others; he plays his part in contributing to society’s wellbeing voluntarily. He looks after himself, his family and does his bit for society.

    I see the Chinese in Sungai Klau and Sungai Ruan not shirking from communal interests. They collect donations and the better-off contribute generously to religious and social causes. But more important, they undertake to look out for themselves first.

    This looking out for themselves is probably shaped by their own acknowledgement that it’s difficult to obtain help from a Malay-dominated government, and this induces the Chinese to look at creative and even defiant ways. But I also think that looking after one’s own interests is also shaped by a personal code of conduct. No one owes you a living but yourself.

    So as to Mahathir’s opinion that Malays are lazy, many Malays will not believe that. The Chinese may also reject this notion. Sure, I have seen Malays being instructed repeatedly by the Chinese mandor over a particular job, but that is not to say the Malay is lazy. He is less skilled.

    There are of course a great number of layabouts and loafers. They are like that because they have no application. Talent is wasted if there is no application.

    Application. The first politician I heard using this word was Lee Kuan Yew. Having all the necessary social and productive skill sets, you require application. If application is hindered, the person becomes a dud.

    I have been thinking what is it that hinders the Malay from applying his potential? Since Mahathir is comparing the Malay to the Chinese, I would like to offer my thoughts on this.

    What’s holding back the Malay? It would easier if we can lump it all into the concept of culture. That would require a more scientific exposition, not possible in a blog like this. We have to be more specific.

    Different mental plane

    The hindrance to application is personal inhibition. The Chinese does not attach much significance to authority, it seems. The Malay operates on a different mental plane.

    The Malay, after years of living under the feudal system, is what he is today because of that. He is inhibited. He has the glass window, the invisible bar that defines him within a narrower space. That space was defined in the past by the feudal system of government and now by the system of neo-feudalism. Umno really does not want to liberate the Malay mind, fearing its power will be challenged.

    That space to me is defined ultimately by the government and so it is ultimately the government that is responsible for moulding the Malay mind. The concept of government to the Malay is that of an imposing benign master, deity-like, to be obeyed at all times. That allows the government to create a childlike dependence on the government and its leaders.

    The path to a more complete application is therefore, I think, a break from dependence. Umno actually does not want to liberate the Malay except on its terms. “On its terms” means without forgetting the dependence and debt to Umno. Umno is actually looking after its own interests first, the interests of its own leaders, and then the Malays.

    Taking care of the Malays should mean freeing them and allowing them personal space.

    The Malay person’s more complete stepping out of the boxed space is inhibited by Umno. Umno has not liberated the Malay mind, and because of that he is inhibited. Of all the characteristics that prevent the Malay his full application, perhaps the most prominent is meekness, which translates into irrational subservience to the government. In the 1970s, when Umno produced the book Revolusi Mental, the party tried to encourage Malays to be more arrogant and defiant in attitude. Perhaps that is what they need most of all. A defiant and rebellious attitude.

    The typical Chinese new villager in Sungai Ruan or Sungai Klau or Teras in Raub has 60 to 70 acres of land in the jungle turned into fruit orchards and so forth. Drive around the new village of Sempalit and you will see every available space in front of houses is planted with vegetables of some kind. Drive around in Sungai Klau and Sungai Ruan and you will see workshops attached to houses. You see that with Malay houses too, but with less intensity.

    The PTG, the Land Office, has not taken action. Suppose a Malay individual decides to cultivate a two-acre plot in the jungle, the people from PTD and Forest Department and other people would be swarming over them. These people are asking the government to allow them a way out, not given handouts.

    The handout recipe is a function of a sound welfare safety net system. Only those old and infirm qualify to get handouts. These people deserve to be helped. The able bodied, the skill-deficient, they cannot be given handouts but a way out.

    Just compare the typical Malay and the typical Malaysian Chinese. The Malay would likely depend on the government for sustenance, either as an employee, contractor or rent seeker. He is a dependent. His mindset is shaped by the interests he can cull from being dependent on and seeking favours from the government. The government is the master, he the slave. The government is a deity to be worshipped, feared and obeyed absolutely.

    The typical Chinese is probably self-employed, is working in some unrelated government business establishment. He defines his life. He is chauvinistic in the sense he accepts that his welfare and wellbeing are his own responsibility. So why can’t he be cocky and refuse to kowtow to anyone? He doesn’t owe anyone else a living. He participates in the free market.

    He is independent and has choices when it comes to what kind of government he wants. If he wants to support DAP for being truer to his interests, there is nothing the Umno-led government can do because the Chinese are not dependent on it.

    Ariff Sabri is the MP for Raub. He blogs at sakmongkol.blogspot.com

  • Dr Mahathir: Malaysia Could Become Singapore if Chinese Community Continues to Support DAP

    Dr Mahathir: Malaysia Could Become Singapore if Chinese Community Continues to Support DAP

    multiracial-malaysia

    KUALA LUMPUR, March 13 — Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamed warned today that Malaysia could become like Singapore if the Chinese community here continues to support DAP’s alleged dream of complete political and economic dominance in Malaysia.

    The former prime minister claimed that nothing good will come of Chinese dominance in politics or the economy — as has happened in neighbouring Singapore — as Malaysia is a multi-cultural society mostly made up of the Malays.

    “In the 13th General Election, the DAP dangled before the eyes of the Chinese that this time (kali ini) they can grab both political and economic dominance,” he said in his latest posting on his blog, chedet.cc.

    “They point to the Perak model where when Pakatan won the head of Government was a Malay but he was totally subservient to the DAP (Chinese).

    “When the Pakatan Government with Nizar of PAS as the MB was brought down, the DAP told the Chinese that they had lost a Chinese Government. The Chinese in Perak have since become anti-BN,” he added.

    He was referring to Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin, the PAS leader who helmed Perak for 10 months in 2008 in a DAP-dominated government before a series of defections led to Barisan Nasional’s (BN) return to power in the silver state.

    Dr Mahathir claimed that the DAP is taking advantage of the fact that the Malays today are divided between Umno and Pakatan Rakyat (PR) partners PKR and PAS, which gives DAP all the leverage it needs.

    Explaining, he said the split support among the Malays would mean that all three Malay-based parties — Umno, PKR and PAS — would need to rely on Chinese support to win an election.

    In such a situation, he alleged that DAP would not need to be directly in charge as they would have already worked out an arrangement with their PR partners where they would have their prime minister of choice under their thumb.

    “Physically holding office is not necessary. If the Prime Minister is totally under the control of the DAP then it would become a Chinese dominated Government,” he said, adding that the DAP could very well see their so-called vision come true as soon as the next national polls if the trend of declining support for the ruling BN coalition continues.

    Dr Mahathir insisted that the power-sharing formula now practised by BN — especially with the recent decision by MCA to rejoin the Cabinet after initially refusing to do so due to their poor outing in last year’s general election — is still the best way forward for the country.

    He stressed that the DAP’s alleged plan to dominate the country’s politics and economy would only perpetuate a culture where each race will only look out for its own interests above the collective interests of the nation.

    “Forget the idea of dominating all fields, of dominating both politics and economics. Go back to the idea of sharing. It will not be forever. It will be only for the duration when the Malays through their numbers dominate politics and the Chinese through their business acumen and money dominate the economy.

    “Once the Malays and other indigenous people gain a fair share of the economic wealth of this country, they will lose their fear of Chinese domination. At that stage the Chinese share of political power would be enhanced.

    “It may take years but that is as much as we can expect for as long as we insist on being identified by our racial origins,” he said.

    BN is currently in a straight tussle with PKR in the Kajang state by-election this March 27. The ruling pact has put MCA vice-president Chew Mei Fun as their candidate against PKR president Datuk Seri Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.

    Source: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/dr-m-malaysia-will-be-like-singapore-if-pakatan-takes-power