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This is another interesting circular that was sent by the Head of Cardiology of the particular hospital to the state Health Director. For the last 2 month, the angiogram machine is down. The Hospital was using the facilities from a private hospital for their cases. It seems that, even that fund is finishing and there are no more stents and balloons, thus from 29th November onwards, no elective angio cases will be done!! More people will ” Mati Katak” in this famous hospital!

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This was an interesting letter written in Malaysiakini yesterday regarding the same critical situation that I have mentioned in my earlier blog entry.
 
 
Empty coffers crippling Johor Baru’s largest hospital
//
A worried citizen
Nov 23, 10
3:15pm
 
On a recent visit to a friend admitted to the largest hospital in the south, Hospital Sultanah Aminah in Johor Bahru, I fell into conversation with several other patients and hospital staff in the ward.

Many of them were saying they felt at a loss. They had been told the hospital budget had run so low that, over several weeks, treatment had been suspended for many common illnesses because there was “no more budget” to buy basic medicines.

Several patients reported that they had been forced to buy their own medicines in private pharmacies.

One patient said she had been asked to pay for a standard blood test to measure calcium, because the hospital laboratory had no more money to run the test.

According to a staff member, the hospital had suspended up to twenty different basic blood tests, including tests for the kidneys and liver function, thyroid hormones, and blood markers to detect heart attacks, over the past few weeks.

A patient told me that ‘non-emergency’ operations had been cancelled because of a lack of resources. One staff member said the hospital had run out of money to buy the inhaled gas medicine needed to make patients unconscious for surgery: the operating theatre had literally “run out of gas”.

Another care-giver said the operating theatre was also experiencing severe shortages of gloves, plastic tubes for giving drips, and even tubes that allowed patients to breathe when they were asleep during surgery. All the resources had to be saved for emergency operations.

As a result, a number of patients with cancer said they had had their cancer surgery postponed indefinitely. When the patients asked when their surgery would be done, they were unable to obtain a firm date, because it was unclear when a new budget would become available.

One patient said her doctor offered her an operation in Seremban instead of Johor Bahru.

A member of staff mentioned that such budget shortages are commonplace at the end of every year, in most government hospitals around the country.

But this year’s problems were particularly severe because of drastic budget cuts. The patients and staff were extremely unhappy, but apparently felt helpless.

I understand the hospitals must be facing a squeeze because of our national budget deficit. But is there not some way to ensure our resources are prioritised appropriately?

Can we not ensure some safeguard so that our government hospital patients are not put at risk, and forced to seek treatment or blood tests in private medical facilities? Many of the patients I saw on the ward were elderly and poor.

Why have our medical and nursing professions failed to speak up against these injustices? Why has our mass media failed to highlight these problems faced by ill patients?
 

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Well, the situation down here is getting rather critical. I just received another info from a friend of mine that ALL elective surgeries for this particular hospital has to be cancelled and postponed due to lack of medications and consumables!! WTH !! And mind you, this is one of the biggest hospital in Malaysia and supposedly a major referral centre for a big state in Peninsular Malaysia. Other then the inability of doing a lot of important blood test, the angiogram machine is also down for the last 1-2 months!

Is this pure mismanagement or lack of fund from the government? I got no idea, as I am not working there anymore. But one thing for sure, many poor souls are going to die, ” Mati Katak” .

My humble advise to the public, please get yourself a medical card! I even tell this to all civil servants as well. Many pensioners regret for not taking a medical card as they trusted the government will take care of them during their golden age. I have many retired civil servants coming to see me in my private clinic as they have given up on the government hospitals, the lack of passion and poor quality of younger doctors! It’s always who you know!

 Are we heading to a developed nation or the opposite direction!!

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Are we going back to 3rd world!

In June 2010, I wrote an article in MMA Magazine “ The Place That Shall Not Be Named: Welcome to the world of Wizardry“. Many who read this article were puzzled that something like that is happening in Malaysia. Of course, I did not mention the name of the place but those who know me and know where I have worked before, will know which hospital I am talking about. A week ago, I received another info from a friend of mine who mentioned that there are many blood tests that cannot be done in the same hospital, till further notice. I have attached a copy of the list that was distributed to the doctors in that hospital.

Najib wants to build a 100 storey tower when the government can’t even provide basic simple healthcare to the public. Some of these blood test are simple routine blood test that should be available easily in any hospitals. I was also made to understand that the “Pengarah” of the hospital was transferred out to Putrajaya in September 2010, not sure whether my MMA article was the culprit!

Worst still, I heard some of the OTs are being forced to close down as there’s not enough consumables such as drip set, branullas etc. Please feel free to add-on if you have further info.

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360 degree turn?

Our country seems to be taking a 360 degree turn. First, when I saw our new Proton Waja replacement model on TV last week, I was laughing my head off. What replacement model? It is back to square one!

Proton started by using Mitsubishi cars way back in 1985, with Proton Saga and Proton Wira. Proton Wira was basically Mitsubishi Lancer in 1980s. After about 15 years, they came up with their own model, which was Proton Waja and subsequently Proton Gen 2, Savvy,Persona and finally Exora. In stead of moving forward, we are now back to the basic! Go back and rebadge Mitsubishi Lancer 2009 model! Way to go , man! If I am the CEO, I rather commit suicide then appearing on TV claiming it is another new model of Proton!

Then, in the worst and most useless Budget (2011) that I have ever listened, we have our beloved PM going back to mahatirism! Build big towers of erection to look great of yourself. Petronas twin tower is almost more than 50% vacant. Dayabumi is also half vacant and now, our PM wants to build another 100 storey tower worth RM 5b! Where is the logic!. No doubt it will stimulate the economy by producing jobs and companies but only for short term. It does not bring any long-term benefits. This is the reason why you don’t see many countries doing this type of development. Just look at Dubai and what happened during the economy downturn.

We seem to be moving backwards than forward. The below video is interesting

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 Excellent view from the German Ambassador. Spot on……………………… What has Malaysia got after chasing away all the best brains due to NEP!

Just build a building, call it a University and print a degree lah, so easy mah! Malaysia Boleh Mah…………

I wonder where is PERKASA and Mamak Kutty, sorry, I heard the latter is somewhere in Melbourne!

 

Skills, equity hurdles to investment

Malaysia doesn’t need Nobel laureates or a man who can go to the moon but qualified, hands-on people to raise their level of competence, says German Ambassador to Malaysia

Several factors are deterrents to a larger number of German investors putting their money into Malaysia, and top of the list is the lack of a qualified workforce.

“Malaysia doesn’t need Nobel laureates or a man who can go to the moon but qualified, hands-on people to raise their level of competence,” said German Ambassador to Malaysia, Dr Guenter Georg Gruber.

He said Malaysians appear to have the notion that an engineer’s work is to get suited up and sit in the office all day.

“Nobody in Germany does that. A qualified engineer goes down to the pits and repair the machines himself, if need be, and he is respected for the willingness to get his hands dirty. Here, the engineers are … different.”

He said this boils down to the lack of emphasis and importance placed in vocational training.

Possibly, it stems from the lack of social acceptance of a person who works with his hands here, Gruber told Business Times in an interview in conjunction with the 20th anniversary of the reunification of East and West Germany tomorrow.

Social acceptance is equally high in Germany whether you are a painter, an electrician or an engineer – as long as you are a master of your craft. “In fact, if you are a good electrician, you will be highly respected and earn good money.”

This appreciation of applied knowledge is probably what propelled Germany to become a world leader in innovation, science and technology today.

As a case in point, he cited his two brothers: one who is a painter and the other, an electrician. Both earn more than he does.

Malaysians are too engrossed in the paper chase that they forget about skill acquisition. Parents’ role in this obsession cannot be downplayed, Gruber said.

“You should always ask what the industry needs. But here, parents only want to send their children abroad, (probably) to some third-class university to get a foreign degree.”

Another factor which he feels is holding back German investors is the Bumiputera equity policy.

Germany’s “hidden champions” – the powerful, often family-owned small- and medium-scale enterprises (SMEs) – are keen to invest here, but are wary of having to give up a substantial share of their business to a “complete foreigner”.

“These are often businesses which have been kept in the family for possibly hundreds of years. They would not want to share their company with someone they don’t know.”

Although they have heard of many positive news from the government on reducing the equity quota, Gruber said that many were still hesitant and adopting a “wait and see” attitude to assess how the new policies would be implemented.

One major German SME which is already here, B-Braun Medical Supplies Sdn Bhd, is currently suffering from market access problems due to the Bumiputera issue, he disclosed.

B-Braun is a company with worldwide presence and an established history of supplying medical solutions in the surgical, pharmaceutical and healthcare management fields.

It does not have a Bumiputera partner, which prevents the company from bidding for government contracts.

“B-Braun has been investing since 1972 because they have had good experience here and want to continue. But they are being excluded in public tendering because of the Bumiputera issue,” said Gruber.

Although this was initially regarded as a “small issue”, it is now becoming a sore point for the company as a new Asean rule states that any company excluded from public tender in an Asean member’s market “would be excluded from all Asean markets”.

“This is not a very positive image for Malaysia if you want to attract more foreign investments,” Gruber said.

Germany has long been recognised for its “highly specialised small and medium enterprises” segment. They are often called “hidden champions” because most produce inconspicuous products but are global market leaders in their own segments.

“We don’t want to impose any ideas on the Malaysian government. They have to choose for themselves whether they want to evolve to remain competitive. Malaysia is doing a lot of reforms as we speak and many initiatives are laudable and fantastic. But implementation, as always, has been a bit of an issue here.”

Germany is one of the top four investors in Malaysia in terms of cumulative investment value, currently at more than RM16 billion.

Even during times ofeconomic crisis, such as last year, when overall foreign direct investments into Malaysia dwindled considerably, fresh money was still coming in from Germany of about RM200 million.

Gruber said that although German investments have remained quite constant, Malaysia has to work harder to stay competitive.

“We have to be frank. A lot of investment goes to China now and to be and remain a world-class leader, Malaysia has to find its niche.”

He suggested that the country look at expending its efforts in developing the renewable energy and pharmaceutical sectors.

“Malaysia is uniquely blessed with many renewable energy sources – palm oil, biomass, sun, water – but it has not fully capitalised on them,” Gruber said. 

Read more: Skills, equity hurdles to investment http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/jermani-2/Article/index_html#ixzz11CCaxiLL

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It is very interesting to see in this era and time, there is a country known as Malaysia which still decide what a citizen should and should not read!!!! Probably the authorities are still leaving in stone age. With such a fast developing  internet/IT era now, we can download the entire book via the internet or even purchase it online! It will reach your doorstep in a couple of days. The government still thinks that we are school children.

If you think that the facts that are written in the book are wrong then by all means, please sue the guylah………. Obviously they will not do that because it will be like opening a can of worms!
Now, not only they ban books but also cartoons…………………………….. How to develop creativity! Cartoon-o-phobia………………
Our Mamak Kutty said that he wants to sue Barry Wain for the book ” Malaysian Maverick” but till today no action mah…………………
 
BTW, each time when they ban a book, it only makes the book a best seller! Now, people will be buying it over the net and from Singapore……………… I bought “Malaysian Maverick” from Singapore!
 
It reminds me of Hitler. If anyone were to read the history of Hitler and ” Ketuanan Aryan“, you will find a lot of similarities between Malaysia and Germany during Hitler’s era. Remember ” Burn the Book” era of Hitler! Hitler’s propaganda is very much similar to Biro Tatanegara’s racial and religious indoctrination. I think our Mamak Kutty is reincarnation of Hitler! What UMNO is practising is exactly what the Nazi party practised in Germany before World War, use your enemies(Jews ) to the maximum then screw them. Most of the German’s technology then were invented by Jews but he turned against them for his political survival.
 
BTW, please visit Malaysia Today website (www.malaysia-today.net)   by Raja Petra (RPK) who has released confidential letters/investigations paper from Anti Corruption Agency!! A good read and you will know why MACC is another component party of BN! Sayonara………………………….
 
 
Kim Quek’s book banned
//
Sep 30, 10 8:13pm
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The Home Ministry has issued a ban order against the book ‘The March to Putrajaya – Malaysia’s New Era is at Hand’, for inciting hatred against the constitution.

NONEThe ministry’s secretary-general Mahmood Adam said the book, written by author Kim Quek, is “not suitable for general reading”.

He said the book contained elements of “baseless accusations and speculations” against national leaders and could incite public hatred and anger.

On Aug 19, Chua Seong Khoon, a representative of the book’s distributor Gerak Budaya, said that some copies of The March to Putrajaya were seized by the authorities from a Popular Bookstore outlet in Kuantan Megamall, Pahang.

A week later, publishing firm Oriengroup Sdn Bhd executive director Low Chee Chong was questioned by police at his office in Cheras in relation to the book.

“Three police officers from Bukit Aman came to my office and they questioned me under Section 112 (of the Criminal Procedure Code as a witness),” said Low.

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Another interesting write-up by AB Sulaiman. Would Najib do a miracle? I don’t think so!

 
A nation of failed economic development plans
//
AB Sulaiman
Sep 20, 10
1:45pm
 
 

COMMENT The world can be a nasty place especially in terms of planning, where your best and well intentioned plans can produce the worst unintended results. The country’s numerous development plans is a perfect example of this.

Since Independence we have always strived to be a country with strong social, economic and political credentials: a strong healthy and united people, public safety and security, great infrastructure, mature democracy, clean human rights record, good education system, governed under rule of law, and of course, a justice-minded judiciary.

To top them all off we are to enjoy a per capita income equal to the peoples in advanced economies. We wish to be an advanced country in our own right.

The current realities are anything but. The people are fragmented while some are migrating to friendlier lands, our infrastructure while adequate is wasteful, our democracy is an ugly disguise for authoritarianism, our education system produces non-thinking graduates, the rule of law has become the rule by law, and the judiciary is an international laughing stock.

The latest world indices would confirm this. There are many but I’d mention just two. First, the 2009 figures for FDI showing an 81 percent fall from US$7.32 billion to US$1.38 billion. At this paltry level we now have joined investment-unattractive countries like Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Timor–Leste.

Not only that, apparently the FDI into Thailand and Indonesia have overtaken that coming into Malaysia, once the darling of international investors.

Two, as for per capita income we are at about US$7,000 while the advanced countries we wish to join are at US$30,000 and above. We are less than a quarter of the way to our self-proclaimed goal.

On looking back, we started well in the arena of economic development, but somewhere along the line we faltered and very badly.

Faltered from the start

I reckon we faltered beginning 1970 when we introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP). This was when we began propounding and experimenting economic development plans beyond the parameters of sound economic principles.

NONESpecifically we made plans and projections not in the interest of the country, but in the interest of a segment of the population, namely the Malays.

Now this might be an explosive statement to make so I have to make my stand clear.

The fact of the matter is that the factors of production in an economic set-up are land, labour, capital, entrepreneurship, and in an increasingly knowledge-based world economy, on the ability to access and utilise knowledge. I ‘borrow’ these factors as principles for economic development.

For an economy to expand therefore, all scarce resources must be optimally channelled for the development of these principles.

I’d reiterate: develop land, inject capital optimally for investment, encourage entrepreneurship, enhance the level of knowledge through smart education. Only then can the economy expand and achieve sustainability.

This last element of sustainability is important – the developing economy must reach a level when it can sustain or regenerate itself without anymore support from any planning agency.
Anything less than this and we can see an economy not going anywhere, and could in fact regress, like our current situation. Lim Kit Siang sums it well – the economy would be a ‘work in regress’.

What has gone wrong with our string of development plans? In my view there are several, and I mention them here despite being aware that many commentators have mentioned them constantly. Perhaps there can be some wisdom in saying the same things again, hoping somewhere along the line the decision makers can begin to listen.

Several hundred billion USD wasted

First, after 1970 we seem to divert the elementary formula for economic development mentioned above, into some non-optimal channels resulting in massive wastage. Our planners channelled land development mainly to the Malays. We made development plans for sectarian, not for national interests.

malaysia formula one race 170305 petronas team posingIn this way the Malays gain comparatively easy access to scarce capital they cannot fruitfully use because of their lack in entrepreneurial skill and spirit. Their lack in education and knowledge have rendered their productivity level below that of their non-Malay counterparts.

I am aware of course that this resource misallocation was for a special reason and thereby meant to be implemented only for twenty years. But when this time was up the authorities would merely forget this proviso.

As events turn out, such allocations have proven to be below optimum level; even wasteful of scarce resources. External observers have noted that the NEP wasted several hundred billion US dollars!

Favouring race over economics

When the leaders saw that the Malays could not cope and the non-Malays restive they use race and religion to both spur the Malay on and to push away any non-Malay disgruntlement. In other words the leaders dismissed the traditional economic factors of national asset creation in favour of Malay racism and cultural hegemony under the banner of Ketuanan Melayu; and of Islam.

malaysia stock exchange market klse 141008 06I might be out of academics but I have never known racism and religion to substitute economic factors in any country’s asset creation efforts. Surely the planners have not forgotten that this new formula was experimental in nature and to last only for twenty years.

In any case, here we see the early unintended results of the NEP. On the part of the Malays we see a community of people developing a false sense of confidence that they have progressed ahead on the platform of race and religion; whereas in actuality they have not.

On the part of the non-Malays they see the wastefulness of the country’s allocation of scarce resources in the interest of racism and religion as the sure way towards non-sustainability and regression.

And yet the authorities would prevent the citizens to even debate the issue.

No post mortem conducted

Come 1990 and the NEP report card had shown the recklessness of this development programme. Malay achievements were nowhere in sight.

Would there be some form of post-mortem analysis to see the good and bad points? To see whether the country should progress ahead in the same race-and-religion principles?

There has been no such effort, not to my knowledge anyway. It has been more of the same: more racism, more religion. And here we see the continuation of a string of failed development programmes.

mahathir malaysiakini interview 020207 denialDr Mahathir Mohamad (left) announced the Vision 2020 stating that the country would join advanced nations by this magical year. It was well-intended perhaps, but with the economic principles remaining unchanged, that is in favour not of the country but of the Malays, the country began its slide downwards.

When Abdullah Ahmad Badawi took the reins of power, many people had thought that he might just do the right thing to put the country back on the right track again. But he used religious motives (remember Islam Hadhari) to lead the people forward – there was no change there either.

Now we have Najib Razak leading the nation out of the dangerous zone of falling into the steep precipice of a failed state. He has his own plans of course, and its called 1Malaysia: people first, performance now. Will he make any headway?

I just say this to him for whatever it is worth. Go ahead with your development plans based on the proven factors of production as mentioned severally above.

But do not be distracted by sectarian interests, nor for religious considerations. Go for optimum scarce resource allocation and economic sustainability.

 

//

 

AB SULAIMAN is an observer of human traits and foibles, especially within the context of religion and culture. As a liberal, he marvels at the way orthodoxy fights to maintain its credibility in a devilishly fast-changing world. He hopes to provide some understanding to the issues at hand and wherever possible, suggest some solutions. He holds a Bachelor in Social Sciences (Leicester, UK) and a Diploma in Public Administration, Universiti Malaya.

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What Hishamudin Rais said below is exactly what I said to one my friend who is an old harden supporter of UMNO but she was still very sentimental to UMNO! Many people especially the older generation still supports UMNO just because of this “Malay right” protector crap. But what they don’t realise is the fact that UMNO has been cheating them all this while, especially since the 1980s. Mahathir screwed up UMNO since then. It is not the same UMNO that was in existence during independence.

 
Hisham Rais: Umno has shrunk the Malay mind
//
Joseph Sipalan
Sep 7, 10
1:23pm
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Renegade artist Hishamuddin Rais declared that the Malay mind has been “bonsified” (shrunk and distorted, like a bonsai plant) by Umno’s political agenda in order to perpetuate the culture of fear against non-Malays.

The former ISA detainee said that it is typical of Umno to play on racial fears to convince the public that they are the best option for Malays to remain at the forefront of social and economic development in Malaysia.

NONE“This process that ‘bonsifies’, nullifies and stupefies (Malays) goes back to the British time. (Malays) are led by lazy leaders and lazy thinkers,” Hishamuddin (middle in photo) said at the ‘Malays are muted too!’ forum at the KL and Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall last night.

The controversial activist noted that Malays have been indoctrinated to fear new ideas and ‘ghosts’ of Chinese supremacy, to the point that the Malay public believe that the ‘ghosts’ are real threats to their existence.

Taking the example of bomoh or witchdoctors, Hishamuddin claimed that Umno employs the same tactics to convince the Malays that they are constantly battling against hantu (ghosts).

“In Malaysia it is very simple. The hantu for the Malays are the Chinese. The Malays are made to believe that there are all sorts of hantu, to encourage the public to be thankful for Umno (to save them).

“It’s just like (the tactics of) the bomoh in the kampung, where kampung folk will be told that there are all sorts of hantu to deal with… Umno uses the same modus operandi,” he said.

Playing up fears

Hishamuddin claimed that just like the colonial British in Malaya, Umno realises that a liberated Malay mind is a threat to their existence, hence the ruling party’s efforts to stop the liberalisation of the Malay mindset.

He alleged that Umno would never agree to free the Malay mind as it is all about maintaining the ruling party’s power and control over Malaysia’s wealth.

NONEHishamuddin noted that such fear of losing power has only taken hold fairly recently, evident especially in the ruling government’s efforts to perpetuate the fear of a recurrence of the May 13, 1969 racial riots.

“They put the fear in Malays that the Chinese wanted to take over the country. I thought that (notion) was mad, because this is the most mismanaged country, with corruption in the police and the judiciary.

“Because the country is so mismanaged, do you really think the Chinese want to take over the country?” he quipped.

Speaking to an audience of around 160 people, Hishamuddin stressed that the ruling government is simply working on the premise of “manufactured consent”‘, where it employs public institutions such as the Malayan Sultanate to force people to agree with whatever opinions or policies it makes.

He said that it has perpetuated the culture of ‘lazy thinkers’ among Malays, where the best minds end up being unwilling or unable to contribute to the community’s advancement.

Licence just to laugh

Hishamuddin stressed that it is unfortunate that the best Malay minds have been left out of the nation’s education system, to make way for ‘half-educated’ Malays who are bent on maintaining the status quo.

“Malays have become very lazy thinkers. To the non-Malays, I ask that you have sympathy as the Malays are faced with a situation where their reading material is very limited and (the government) allows less and less people (to form their own opinions),” he said.

NONETaking the example of the recent banning of comics by cartoonist Zulkiflee Anwar Ulhaque, better known as Zunar (right), Hishamuddin said it is ridiculous that public expression, particularly by Malay artists, should be censored.

“Just imagine, just to laugh you need to get a licence… and if you want a licence you will have to engage in corruption to pay the Marxists,” he said. 

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Rising Racism and Patriotism!

The article below was written by Dr David Quek, President of MMA in The Malaysian Insider. He is spot on the issues that are happening in this country.

Just before I read David Quek’s article, a friend of mine wrote some interesting comments on my earlier post (Racism/Quality & Transfers) linked to my Facebook. I do agree with him that there are more and more youngsters who can’t speak Malay in our country. Majority of these people are from the Chinese ethnic group. Most of these people are below the age of 20 years old. As a doctor I do see them in my clinic. At times it is rather amusing because the parents can speak good Malay/English but the children can’t. This is a peculiar scenario that we are seeing now. Why is this happening?

Again, we need to go back and see what happened 20 years ago that has progressed to this stage. Way back in the 1960s and 1970s, many vernacular schools were on the verge of being closed down due to lack of enrolments. Many non-Malays felt that they need to go to the National Schools to be part of the country they called home. They wanted to learn Malay, English and mingle around with other races. At that time, the syllabus was still UK-based and was in English but was slowly changed to Malay by end of 1970s. Majority of the teachers were non Malays with the Malay teachers were mainly involved in teaching BM and arts subjects. There were hardly any racial slurs or remarks that were made. All religious societies were freely formed in these schools. The missionary schools were well-respected and was still run by the missionaries with assistance from the government. In fact, most of the school canteens were run by Chinese !! No issue about halal or haram! I was among the lucky ones who just manage to go to National schools at the end of 1970s but then, I realise that something is not right.

Instead of integrating and uniting people under 1 education system, our politicians decided to separate us even further. MARA colleges, boarding schools, ITM(later UITM), matriculation were formed to help the Malays. No doubt that these were necessary to help the poor Malays in the rural area where good schools were not available, in fact there were no secondary schools in a lot of rural areas. But what about poor non-Malays in rural area? they were just left behind! unfortunately what started as a welfare system for the poor rural Malays were soon hijacked by the more urbanised Malays. Slowly, most of the enrolments in these schools were Malays from the urban cities as they were definitely performing better than their rural counterparts. I feel that there is no need for MARA colleges and boarding schools now since we have both primary and secondary schools available in most rural areas nowadays.

After standard 5 exams (equivalent to UPSR today), a lot of my Malay friends disappeared to MARA colleges, agama schools and boarding schools ( one of them supposedly Sheikh Muzaffar, the so-called astronaut). Then came SRP (PMR equivalent) after which the rest of my remaining Malay friends disappeared. So much so, my school (a premier school in Seremban) only had 1 Malay student in the entire Science stream till Form 5! Despite getting good results in SPM, non of the Non-Malays ever received any JPA scholarship!! In fact one of my non-Malay friend(an Indian ethnic) were told directly to his face that JPA scholarship for medical education is only for Bumiputeras, during the interview (back in 1989)! why bother calling for the interview then? His father was just a Tamil school teacher and his mother was a housewife! Talk about social background. At the same time, I can here a lot of my Malay neighbours who got inferior results than me receiving scholarship to go overseas. The worst part, they are better off economically than us!

So we all ended up doing STPM (Form 6) for 2 years to be eligible to enter local universities. And yes, not a single Malay in our school Form 6 science stream. Those who did SPM and got good results were immediately absorbed into matriculation, another BUMI only course! Thank GOD, we did very well in our STPM and got into local university to do medicine. Again, all local universities had quota system not based on merit. Indians were allocated only 16 slots for medicine in UM. Imagine how competitive it was for the non-Malays to enter local university then. Probably that is what that made us better and stronger, survival of the fittest!

Soon, people began to realise that they do not get any benefit by going to national schools and learning BM etc for unity. They are never treated as equals and discriminated in education opportunities. Slowly, they lost interest and started moving away from the national schools thus the mushrooming of vernacular schools again (please read my post on ” 1Malaysia Education” under education page). This coupled with the racial discrimination, racial remarks in schools only made the situation worst. With the introduction of KBSR/KBSM by late eighties, the entire education system was manipulated to benefit the ruling government. History book were revamped and the contribution of non-Malays were wiped out. The students were made to be in cocoons! You can see this with the current quality of university products, which is the extension of our schooling system.

So, talking about patriotism, why should these people be blamed for not able to speak Malay and thus called unpatriotic! As I have always said, we need to look into the root of the problem before making any comments or remarks. If you are at the receiving end, you will know the answer. People have lost faith in this country as the discrimination only seem to be getting worst. Of course, those who have benefited from the system will not know the problems the others are facing. Even though at times I do get angry with people who can’t speak Malay or English, I feel pity for them as circumstances have made them to be like that. Circumstances created by our ruling party, divide and rule policy! Below I attach one of my friend’s comment in my facebook , saying the same as what I have said:

 

but if one were to target just the chinese by quoting “wa tak tahu cakap malayu” … pls be sensitive about this issue. many of the older and some younger generations are not proficient at all with the national language. i can excuse the old generations because some are direct migrants from china and many live amongst themselves being self sufficient. in fact, i can tell u with so many middle man & touts & corrupt tradesmen running around, i can tell u its still good living in this country without knowing the national language well. but does this make them any less malaysian ?

as for the younger generations, many policies in this country have forced the non bumis in this country to give up hope learning the language well. (but that doesnt mean they are any less malaysian than you) Many were educated overseas or private schools or chinese schools where BM were not emphasized at all. why ? because all the local universities are biased against them, all the govt contracts will not be allocated to them, even in nasional schools many are racially ostracized, even the courts have given up the idea of making our bahasa compulsory for ALL documents. and with many middle men serving their needs, there is practically no chance for the non malays to grasp the language well. again, does that make these citizens any less patriotic than you ? (patriotism does not mean can sing national anthem and speak BM … it also involves of many many other factors u know … glorifying racism does not mean one is patriotic)

last but not least. you said many don’t bother to speak malay while staying in this country. actually the truth is, many bother to speak but had no good teachers in school to teach them lah. all languages the same, takes a good while to pick up the language lah. for the extreme ppl who really cant speak anything, those form just a super small minority. its like someone who dont speak english in this part of the earth, i mean english has been the ubiquitous language, why more than half of the ppl on earth cant speak the language well ? does that mean they should go home to outer space or balik hutan where all of us walk out from ?

bahasa melayu is still a very young language. i can say it is one of the easiest language to learn on earth and it can be a beautiful thing to be able to sing songs with it. but by targeting the chinese and saying one is not a malaysian because this person cannot grasp the language is totally wrong. knowing the language is just one of the many factors to call yourself patriotic but it is certainly not the only criteria. besides, even if we were 100% patriotic, will we all be accorded the bumiputera status and be recognized as a true malaysian and enjoy all the benefits of this country ?

this country is currently in a mess from top to bottom, across all boards. sparking controversial debates using the chinese descendents is very very unfair. fyi, i am already the 5th generation of migrant in malaysia, why am i not considered a bumi ? i speak malay, though i am not a muslim, i understand this country and its history, i know my rights, i know the constituition, i know the culture and i know my public holidays, i also know my agong and the sultan, i know all the ministers and i know the national anthem. i also know what merdeka is all about.

lastly, the indonesians. have you met indonesians who cant speak a word of indonesians ? how many indonesians have u befriended all your life ?
?malaysian earlier than any of us ? does that make them any less malaysia who had no idea how to speak BM properly. blame who & blame what ? aint they here in …malaysians and eastern asli have come across many orang i do agree with you many are not proficient in BM. iyes

 

Rising racism, 53 years on

By David KL Quek

This year, I became a senior citizen. I can now withdraw my EPF savings and I qualify for some discounts for travel and surprisingly even for some buffet meals at some eateries.

But as I ponder upon ‘retirement’, it is sad to see the Malaysia that I know and live in, grows increasingly uncertain, diffident and bogged down in self-made crises, one after another.

Our previously phenomenal economic growth has now trickled down in a dizzying spiral of middle-income trap – not helped by the 2008 global financial crisis.

Our foreign direct investments have dwindled as our competitiveness, our productivity, perhaps our systemic corruption and wastage, have now been exposed and called into question.

Even our inborn entrepreneurs are investing overseas because of the uncertain future and shifting policies, which have made us face the truth of our competitiveness and value as a nation.

Instead of maturing gracefully, we appear to have become trapped in a petulant phase of angry adolescence breaking out senselessly to attack convenient bogeymen -race and religion appear to have become the easy targets, which breed even more political and economic uncertainty.

As a fourth generation Malaysian, I was born two and a half years before our fateful Merdeka. I am still wondering whether we are truly ‘liberated’ as befits the meaning of ‘Merdeka’, so gloriously proclaimed by our Bapa Merdeka, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj, in 1957.

That Merdeka was to have ushered in the birth of what some would have called ‘an unlikely nation’, one that appeared cobbled together in a slapdash manner, juxtaposing a disparate if hodgepodge peoples – predominantly Malays, Chinese and Indians- and akin to mixing oil in water. Yet again, does any one in such serendipitous circumstance have that conscious sense of history and historicity of these singular moments?

To be fair, even then, no one dared to dream that the idea of Malaya and later Malaysia could succeed. But truth be told, we did do very well for so many years, becoming one of the rising ‘Asian tigers’. It’s just these recent years that we have foundered and perhaps lost a little faith in ourselves.

So many other post-colonial new nations had self-destructed in interethnic, religious or tribalistic clashes and conflagrations. We nearly did in May of 1969.

But good sense and firm actions created a novel social re-engineering feat (the NEP) in its wake, to bring about some semblance of order, reasonable interethnic tolerance and suppressed racial tensions.

For the next four decades, we have lived a reasonably harmonious if distinct existence, although seething fault-lines appear now and again to threaten the veneer of our touted ‘Truly Asian’ unity among our unique pastiche of colourful normalcy.

Forty years hence, ratcheted-up rhetoric is beginning to sunder this extraordinary relationship. Polarised insistence on continued affirmative action in stylised if arbitrary terms, remains a bone of contention, which powerfully fans the embers of resurgent ethnic fears and pride.

Sadly, as we celebrate this auspicious anniversary, we seemed mired in increasingly rabid and insulting racism, which greatly threatens our flimsy unity and contrasting diversity.

Extremist leaders continue to spew so much hurtful invectives that these would have shamed the most neo-Nazi right-wingers, the world over. Most modern societies would have punished such hate-mongers if not for their senseless racial baiting but then for their ad hominem attacks on just about anyone who dares to challenge their warped if narrow worldview.

Perhaps the media can play their roles better by downplaying these media hounds, whose purposes are so sickening and depraved.

Racist rhetoric

It appears that more and more politicians are flogging the twisted if populist concept of ethnic supremacy and extraordinary rights (of ethnic ketuanan) once again, as if to bolster their public images as racial champions. The loudest and the most strident appear to be those who are now commanding the greatest publicity and arguably some perverse following.

Our authorities appear timorous in not wanting to directly confront these vociferous bullies, for fear of some unintended backlash. But in so doing, the government loses even more credibility. The government of the people must serve as a fearless just arbiter of a firm and respected Leviathan, and not be held ransom by some mindless minority.

There cannot be distorted applications of the rule of law, where any one can flaunt and challenge the wisdom of the law, at wanton will. There seems to be no more respect for anyone else except for the self-righteous bully pulpit arrogance of voluble tyrants disgorging more and more hatred and painfully shrill racist ideologies to the hilt.

Freedom of speech implies rational discourse and debate, not threatening and insulting rantings. It certainly does not absolve anyone of despicable spewing and inciting of ethnic or religious intimidation or hatred.

But who really is to blame for the recent rise in racist rhetoric?

It appears that some components of the government are still pushing the propaganda machine to perpetuate the concept of racial supremacy and denigrating all other ethnic groups.

The Biro Tata Negara (BTN, National Civics Bureau) instead of instilling national civic consciousness, appears to relish in inculcating and indoctrinating any civil servant or would be scholarship holder, in a time-warped belief system that only the Malays are true patriots and truly deserving of their Malaysianness.

This is still happening 50-odd years following Merdeka, and one wonders why non-bumiputeras don’t sometimes feel any greater sense of belonging to this nation of ours.

Surprisingly such BTN programmes appear to have been a ‘recent’ phenomenon. My sister and brother-in-law who are senior government servants in the Ministries of Education and Higher Education respectively claimed never to have been subject to such gross demeaning indoctrination or abuse – perhaps, they too have been too polite, too programmed, to acknowledge. It did not take place when I was a clinical lecturer for seven years at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia in the 1980s and early 1990s.

But as MMA president, I have received some angry verbal complaints (many are traumatised, frightened and do not want to be quoted for fear of reprisals) that even non-bumiputera junior medical specialists and house officers, who aspire to join the service or to be confirmed, are currently subject to physical and mental abuse. Mind you, these are not students of impressionable age, but grown men and women in their twenties and thirties.

Some have been made to squat and huddle together in front of other bumiputera peers, rudely woken at early mornings, shouted at, called pendatang, usurpers of scholarships and positions, depriving the true bumiputeras of their places and rights, told in uncertain terms that they are here only at the behest and kindly generosity of the bumiputeras, and that they can always ‘go home’ or balik kampung which means China or India.

Groups have been bullied into subordinating to and acknowledging the official ‘dogma’, or risk having the entire group not ‘passing the course’. Do these utterances ring a bell?

Less than a year and a half ago, one young returning teacher broke down from such radical abuse and hazing, that her family decided to pull her out, repaying the loan in full – enough is enough! So can we not see how this will perpetuate the cycle of blatant racial baiting and hatred when these ‘officers’ return to their respective services, after such provocative BTN courses?

Mustn’t such propaganda stop? Is the government truly sincere in wishing to stem such state-endorsed racism? Is this government truly espousing the 1Malaysia concept for whatever it is worth?

Last year, Minister in the PM’s Department Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz acknowledged that the BTN must be overhauled. He had revealed that courses by the BTN were racially divisive and used to promote certain government leaders. While Nazri was bold enough to expose this, he was nearly alone in defending the need to overhaul the BTN courses.

Most of the ruling elite, including the deputy premier had sided with those who refused to acknowledge Nazri’s contention that the BTN was a mockery of the 1Malaysia concept. Of course, former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad joined in and insisted there was no need to revamp the BTN courses, which led Nazri to call the former PM a “bloody racist”, even conferring on Dr M the title “the father of all racists”.

So are we surprised that Perkasa, school teachers and principals, public officers, resort to such ‘ingrained’ behaviour, notwithstanding the so-called ‘provocation ‘ from their charges, their students, who must surely be so ‘insensitive’ as to other’s religious practices?

Pursue the perpetrators

Yet, when called upon to investigate such racist behaviours, the authorities appear to be dragging their feet, and instead concentrate with such efficiency to question and charge a rapper (NameWee) who merely was bold and foolhardy enough to serve as a conduit to expose these wrongdoings.

Can the police and authorities not see the biasness of their actions, by pursuing the messenger and not the perpetrator of possible crimes?

Can the authorities not understand why thinking Malaysians and non-bumiputeas are beginning to feel persecuted and discriminated against, more and more, despite utterances to the contrary by our political leaders?

Can the authorities not understand why more and more disgruntled non-bumiputeas are making a beeline to emigrate whenever and wherever they can – hardship, uprooting displacement and starting over, notwithstanding? This has got nothing to do with patriotism, when one is constantly told that he or she is unequal as a citizen, and that they are unwanted.

Can every Malaysian non-bumiputera truly feel that he or she has a fair and reasonable share of this piece of earth called Malaysia? Do our authorities truly appreciate talent, merit or worth of any non-bumiputera at all, or is this mere lip service? Can they not see the hollowness and insincerity of their pronouncements – when we can hardly see the ‘walk’ from the ‘talk’?

Such crescendos of racist ravings seriously undermine the carefully constructed dream of a true Malaysian nation, shattering the much-bandied ‘unity’ slogan already so tattered among our terribly troubled diversity.

Hurtful cries to demonise and belittle other races as unequal, pendatang and lesser than themselves cannot but help demoralise every peace-loving non-bumiputera Malaysian who aspires for a better tomorrow, a better Malaysia.

We fully recognise the special position of the bumiputeras, but as non-bumiputeras we also increasingly demand our rightful place in this nation of ours. Lest it is forgotten, our position is also enshrined in the constitution. This is not arrogance, but a statement of fact as a human right of any citizen.

We do have a long way to go. We have many mindsets to change, to engage, to dialogue with in sincerity and humility, so that race and religion cannot be made a bogeyman for every travail or challenge that the country is facing.

We have our work cut out for us, but as rational Malaysians, we must all try even harder to persuade the government to be one for all Malaysians and not for mere sloganeering alone or for any one racial group.

We must flush out all closet racists. We must instead cultivate greater rational discourse and dialogue without preconditions of threats and top-down dictates. We need to work on closer cross-ethnic cooperation, tolerance and acceptance so that together we are truly more than the sum of our rich individual strength and heritage.

We must nurture greater cohesiveness by lowering the tempo and temperature of racial baiting and shrill cries and rhetoric of ethnic pride and irrational fear-mongering. We must work towards greater confidence of sharing and building and not engage in divisive dismantling bigotry based on artificial barriers of so-called ethnic or religious sensitivities.

This government must be seen to act without fear or favour, by espousing fair and just policies, by directly confronting and stemming the tide of racism and racial-baiting. Divisive ravings drive uncertainty and suppress confidence. We need to reverse such negative rhetoric if we wish to improve the climate for economic buoyancy in this country.

By staying the course of inept inattention, we stand to lose our global competitiveness even more, as we Malaysians lose confidence in ourselves and our grip on the future.

We must do this right and soon, or risk losing everything! 53 years hence, and Merdeka then would have been in vain.

“We came into the world like brother and brother, And now let’s go hand in hand, not one before another.” – William Shakespeare, in the closing couplet of ‘The Comedy of Errors’ [V.i.425-26]

DR DAVID KL QUEK was the editor-in-chief of the MMA News (bulletin of the Malaysian Medical Association) for 11 years and is currently president of the MMA.

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