Dr. Syed Husin’s Speech at Launch of “The Malays: Their Problems and Future”
posted by Din Merican
June 17, 2008
In his speech at the launch of his book, “The Malays: Their Problems and Future” at the Armada Hotel, Petaling Jaya on June 14, 2008 in the presence of 400 guests, Dr. Syed Husin Ali said:
“Thank you all for coming tonight. I have heard rumours that most of you have come not to listen to speeches but… to buy my book. As you know, in Bolehland rumours are more reliable than news reports in the BN controlled mainstream media. Well, if you missed it, that was supposed to be an advertisement before the actual programme.
Allow me to begin by narrating a little experience as a prisoner of conscience which has something to do with the writing of my book. As some of you might already know, I was arrested under the ISA in December 1974 together with Anwar Ibrahim, following the hunger march of about 25,000 peasants in Baling. More than a thousand students and staff of the universities were arrested for demonstrating in Kuala Lumpur to support the march. About a dozen students, ex-students and lecturers, including both of us, were subsequently sent to Kamunting.
After twenty months in that detention camp, I was taken to Kuala Lumpur with the promise of release. Later Anwar was also taken there and indeed released before his two years was up. But I was put under solitary confinement in an unknown holding centre to be observed and dissected by a team of Special Branch operatives for more than six months. The outcome was that I had to continue being guest of the Agong for additional four years. Of course combined with his period of incarceration following a kangaroo court trial that took place after his sacking, Anwar managed to break my six year record!
In that unknown centre I was under intense interrogation for hours on end, sometimes without sleep, by a regular shift of officers, some playing kind and some not acting but really cruel. I experienced being spit on, insulted, slapped, beaten or left on many occasions in my cell of eight by eight feet in total darkness. I am sure the same experiences have to be borne by the majority of detainees in Kamunting now, who have been there nearly six years.
Somehow or other, I managed to stop my tormentors continuing to spit or slap merely by smiling or offering the other cheek. I also learnt to hear the sound of but not listen to their threatening tirades. Admittedly, what I found most difficult was to surmount the psychological feeling of loneliness and abandonment in the dark cell. I need not elaborate on these because they have been narrated in my book, “Two Faces”.
Please bear with me a little bit more about the excruciating experiences in my lonely cell. One of my senior interrogators proudly said he could destroy the only thing I have, my mind. This was after I refused to be coerced into implicating Dr Rajakumar, yes, this Rajakumar as a pro-communist and admitting that I was the intermediary between the then DPM Dr Mahathir Mohamad and the communist underground.
Had I admitted, perhaps the Minister of Home Affairs then, Ghazali Shafie would make sure that he would replace Mahathir as DPM and then proceed to become PM. Then we would have different type of problems for the country. Some people asked: “Why didn’t you admit? You could have saved us from Mahathir’s and now Abdullah’s rule.”
Of course I would not admit to such blatant lie. Further any admission would certainly be used as a new ground to extend my detention. Anyhow, Ghazali still signed my two year extension because the Special Branch officers found I had not been rehabilitated.
Every time I was abandoned in the cell I would inevitably do three things to make sure my body and mind remained strong. First. Exercise, mostly by pumping and jumping up and down. Second, pray and recite whatever verses of the Quran I remembered. Third, sing some old English and Malay tunes that I was familiar with. But these were not sufficient. I wanted to do something more to keep my mind more active.
It was at this time that I remembered a suggestion from my friend Dr. Rajakumar, conveyed through my wife during my early days in Kamunting, to write a book on Malay values. But this topic was too specific and needed deep research. So I chose something easier. Whenever I was left in the cell, I thought about and planned this book. After a few months I had practically every page of all chapters clearly written in my mind.
When I was taken back to Kamunting and separated from the other detainees, I had all the time to myself to furiously type out the whole thing within three weeks. So you see, that is the genesis of my book. That is why I have chosen my two long standing and respected friends – Raja and Anwar – one to speak on the book and the other to launch it.
It was before the recent general elections I decided to update and revise it. I dare say that the Malay problems as I saw them from the dark cell I was dumped into three decades ago have not changed very much. Granted there have been improvement in certain aspects of the conditions of the Malays, but in some others they have indeed deteriorated.
It is true that the incidence of absolute poverty among Malays has decreased, but relative poverty has increased as the gap between the rich minority and the poor majority has widened. It is true there are more Malay new rich produced through the government development programmes, but concentration of wealth and corruption are becoming more chronic especially at the highest level in Malay society. Many new towns have been built with beautiful roads and unnecessary decorative bridges, but the condition of some Malay villages appear to remain the same since Merdeka.
It is true that there are more Malays who are highly educated and have become successful professionals, but there is alarming deterioration in moral and ethical values among a growing number of Malays, including those holding important public offices. At the same time there is also increase in all kinds of criminal as well as anti-social activities. It is true that there are many Malays who have built ostentatious palaces for themselves from the country’s wealth they have robbed. But many in the rural areas still live in run-down huts and study in ill-equipped schools, sans electricity and tap water, while a large number in urban slum areas are living in constant fear of forcible eviction.
I am not suggesting that these are exclusively Malay problems. They are also shared by other communities – the Chinese, Indian, Iban, Kadazandusun and many others. But, as I have statistically shown in the book, comparatively a larger proportion of Malays are still lagging behind the Chinese especially and even the Indians too, in income, education, housing and so forth. This, ironically, prevails despite the so-called “ketuanan Melayu” (Malay supremacy), constitutional guarantees on the Malay special position and the New Economic Policy (NEP).
Admittedly, this country has witnessed a lot of development especially after the NEP. But unfortunately, they emphasise more on economic rather than social and human development. At the same time they stress more on physical or material rather than moral or ethical development. There is more allocation on wasteful mega projects to provide big contracts and commissions to cronies rather than providing social facilities for greater benefit and welfare of the ordinary people, especially the disadvantaged groups.
Who do I mean by the disadvantaged groups? Of course, basically they are the poor in the lower class. But I must say, they also include the middle income groups who can hardly afford decent living because of their big family to support and the ever rising prices of daily needs. In fact, I would not exclude also the professionals, executives, businessmen and others in the upper middle class who often face discrimination because of their ethnic background or political association, for example.
These disadvantaged groups are from different ethnic groups and not confined only to the Malays. But those who form the majority are the poor and low income groups, the bulk of whom are Malays. In the process of development the perception and the reality to large extent is that the Malays from the privileged groups are the greatest beneficiaries. Even the poor and disadvantaged Malays are not given their due share.
Several observations need to be emphasized here. First. Poverty and low income, although largely are not exclusively Malay problems. There are Orang Asli in the Peninsula and Orang Asal in Sabah and Sarawak who are in more oppressive conditions than a large number of the Malay poor. There are Indians and Chinese in the estates and slum areas who are poor too. But just because their number is small it does not mean we can afford to neglect and exclude them from the development process.
Be that as it may, the fact to be stressed is that the Malays constitute the big majority of the poor and deprived in the country. So, primary attention must justifiably be focused on them; but there is no justification for neglecting the non Malays with similar or sometimes worse plights.
Second, in the name of the Malays as a whole, a small coterie of those in advantageous positions have managed to use or abuse the NEP and the constitutional provisions on Malay special position to enrich themselves. In most cases they succeed, though many of them only temporarily, on the basis of “know who” and not “know how”. The privileges they enjoy are often misinterpreted as those of the whole Malay community. Ironically, beyond beautiful rhetoric there has been insufficient sensitivity and commitment among many Malay government leaders towards the poor who are the majority Malays.
At the same time, many non Malay capitalists have become wealthier than the leading Malay corporate figures enjoying special support and sponsorship. Although far from being Bumiputera, they are able enjoy the benefits from the big allocations for development under NEP projects primarily through their “know who” links with powerful politicians whom they can often easily buy off. They certainly have more privileges than the ordinary Malays.
Third, the persistence of absolute poverty and deterioration of relative poverty affect the access to good education, health services, housing and so forth among the poor. Since the majority of Malays are poor, consequently they are most adversely affected. Again these plights are not the monopoly of just the Malays for they are shared also by the poor from other ethnic groups. The cause of all these can be traced to the existing socio-economic system and the government policies, which are strongly rooted in the dominating free enterprise (laissez faire) philosophy.
There is something inherent in this system and policies that work against the interest of the poor and the weak. With the influence of globalization (a new form of colonialism), the prevailing political power structure and the dominating free enterprise philosophy, the system favouring the rich few will persist for quite some time. There is great need to temper this system with humanitarian and egalitarian values and programmes. There is still need for positive discrimination. But it should not be based not on ethnicity, but instead based on necessity that cut across ethnic line.
I share the view that after nearly forty years, there is need to reappraise the NEP and replace it with a new Malaysian Economic Agenda (MEA) as mooted by Anwar and accepted as PKR party policy. This agenda contains the following important ingredients: (a) it focuses on the poor and disadvantaged, with social facilities provided more for their welfare and emancipation, (b) it introduces poverty alleviation and development programmes for the Malay rural poor, but providing similar opportunities and treatment to the other ethnic groups, cutting across ethnic boundaries, (c) it restricts powerful political leaders and their cronies accumulating wealth from filthy sources and by dirty means, (d) it wages effective war against corruption, waste and mismanagement, and (e) it empowers the people, particularly the poor and disadvantaged Malays, so that they they can be liberated from slavish mentality and have the courage to promote and defend their basic economic and social rights.
The idea of replacing the NEP with the MEA is to generate balanced development to achieve social justice through fair and equitable distribution of the country’s economic and social resources. Since the policy and orientation of MEA is based on the dictum of kepedulian rakyat i.e. concern for the plight of the people, the poor in particular, it will certainly be most advantageous to the Malays who form the majority poor. At the same time it can guarantee greater ethnic stability because the non-Malays are included in the equation. What is needed is ketuanan rakyat (people’s supremacy). This is the way forward.” — S. Husin Ali
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Dr Collin Abraham: Resurrection of the NEP
RESURRECTION OF THE NEP
Tun Dr Mahathir’s foreboding that the Malays stand to be colonized again under the Iskandar Development Region Project (IDR project), sets the stage for an analysis within the framework of W.B. Yeats, “Things Fall Apart; the Centre Cannot Hold”; and the “Gunfight at OK Corral” where Tun himself will probably be the last man standing against all odds.
The fact of the matter is that despite his groundbreaking thesis of the Malay Dilemma and the massive thrust arising from this to push the Malays ahead economically (as no Prime Minister has done or can ever do), Tun has had to face the harsh reality that the NEP has been a failure in achieving this target. There is not much point anymore in laboring on the reasons for this at any detail. This is because it is now widely acknowledged that it was primarily due to the usurpation of political power by the Malay Upper and Middle classes, who had in fact shown great ingenuity in utilizing this base for the accumulation of unprecedented personal economic wealth to the detriment of the community as a whole. Of course, this achievement would not have become a reality, or indeed a fine art as is has, had it not been with the active involvement and participation of the Baba in the Ali Baba equation but this is yet another related story.
Tun is theoretically correct in his analysis that the Malay rakyat would be colonized again under the IDR project, for the simple reason they have nothing to gain because they have nothing to fight back with. Under British colonialism they also were in the same position which is one of the reasons some joined the Malayan Communist Party because the latter had the guns to fight back. The present situation is in fact worse because the Malays simply do not have the high tech knowledge -based skills which cannot be acquired overnight simply by joining foreign skilled personnel. They are at the bottom of the skills ladder and likely to remain there, because the preliminary steps of skills on which they could have climbed up the skills ladder, are no longer relevant. This is the same reason why the majority of Blacks in cities in the USA find themselves “down in the dumps”.
The political and economic situation of elite domination in the country today is now fully entrenched and irreversible in the political system and it is therefore necessary to ‘write off ‘the present scenario as unworkable and to implement new development models instead. I am in a unique position in having had two of the most outspoken brilliant Malays, namely Tun Dr Mahathir and Datuk Zaid Ibrahim write Forewords to my recent book entitled “The Finest Hour”: Malaysian-MCP Peace Accord in Perspective where they have both suggested that alternate development models should now be seriously explored. Indeed I have devoted one entire Appendix in the book entitled “Epilogue” postulating that unless and until we seriously consider such alternate models, even the present precarious peace we now enjoy, may not be lasting.
With the greatest of respect and in all humility I wish to propose that the Malaysian people appeal to His Majesty our King to immediately appoint a Royal Commission for National Integration and National Unity under an Ombudsman along the lines of the National Operations Council (after the May 13th racial riots). The composition of this Commission should be drawn entirely from Non-Government Organisations, the only exception being senior members of the Armed Forces, to ensure that implementation was always complied without question, as was done under the NOC.
Dr Collin Abraham.
dinobeano - June 17, 2008 at 4:11 am
The doctor is right. Social welfare has been so blatantly forgotten by the govt that whatever promise they make about wanting to alleviate poverty and help the poor just rings hollow and empty. The govt is counting too much on NGOs to “take care”, so to speak, of the poor, the homeless, the sick, the mentally- or physically-disabled, etc. The govt has literally forgotten these people, and they have been sidelined for far too long.
They detain people under the ISA, and to them, that’s the end of it. They have relieved themselves of a “thorn”. But they have forgotten that the men they detain have families. They have parents, wives, children. They were the breadwinners. So what is to happen to the family of the detainees? They couldn’t care less.
They say they fight for nation-development, that they will create job opportunities. They say they don’t discriminate against race. They probably don’t. But one thing is for sure, they most definitely discriminate against the amount of money you have in the bank. The more you have, the more you will get. Doesn’t matter if you’re Malay or Chinese or Indian. See? They’re trying to say they’re fair, that they don’t racially discriminate. But is it true?
They sue people, journalists, reporters, and now even bloggers, when they say, report, write, blog, or do anything that they deem is against their favour. They smack you with charges, the ISA, OSA, PPPA, Sedition Act, Multimedia Act, and a handful of others, just to shut them up. And with a backlog of ONE MILLION court cases, one would consider himself/herself lucky to even appear in court and have a fair trial alive.
We are a developing nation. We have been developing, for not only the past 50 years, but we have been developing for far longer than that. How much development do we see today? Sure, we have skyscrapers. We have state-of-the-art airports, and F1 Circuits, ,and shopping malls, and casinos and entertainment parks. We have towers, we have 5 star hotels, we have beautiful beach resorts, we have fantastic tourism destinations, we have huge sports stadiums, we have absolutely fabulous parades every Merdeka celebration. But how much of that translates into our everyday lifestyles? How many of us can afford to travel from KL to Pulau Redang for a holiday? How many of us have stayed in a 5 star hotel? How many of us travel overseas from KLIA? How many of us have ever watched an F1 race live? How many of us can afford to gamble?
All that development. Was it all really done for us? The people? Or was it done for the people who got the contracts?
su - June 17, 2008 at 6:09 am
When does the book come my way?
The irony – the “lie”!
What’s a good lie? A triple bogey? Or the trophy?
Hmm!
___________
Salak, you have to buy Dr. Syed Husin Ali’s book. It does not come your way. Seek it, and be ready to spend rm45 for a hard cover copy.Otherwise, wait for the paperback edition to come and then you can save rm10 which you can use to buy roti chanai and tea tarik for yourself and your special one. Take care.—Din Merican
Salak - June 17, 2008 at 9:49 am
Su, your comments support my view that the present UMNO-BN government and its precursor have mismanaged our economy. Billions of ringgit have been wasted on ego boosting schemes and corridors with high sounding names, and on political handouts to abd bailouts of favored Babas and Alis, the latter getting only a small percentage of the largesse, mainly in the form of rents and gifts.
We have a Parliament that until the 12th GE was dominated by a collection of BN politicians who said “yes” to everything that the ruling government proposed, that is, via rubber stamping. The Opposition was too small and disunited to be effective. Now we have 82 Opposition MPs, and they will not take things lying down, and will keep the UMNO-BN Governments on its toes. Finally, wisdom came to Malaysian voters.
Things are going to change for two reasons, one being that Malaysians are fed up with the wastage of public funds and rampant corruption and two, our economy can no longer support inefficient industries and costly public administration. Effects of years of fiscal irresponsibility are beginning to have a toll on our national competitiveness. If we fail to act, Malaysia will continue to lag behind the region.
The time has come for us to go back to the fundamentals of good economic management and public government.
Din Merican - June 17, 2008 at 11:20 am
Ich danke Ihnen, Din!
A hardcover will keep for my cucu.
I could earn the RM10 and pay for 2 for my Elder Bro!
Australia has bad wheat harvests according to news today. Must brush up on my baking skills. I did bake good, Kawan!
Salak - June 17, 2008 at 2:20 pm
Is that ‘Kawan’ spelt with a small k or a big K?
The price of corn in the U.S. has gone up (and so has a bag of rice) and so have wholesale prices of everything – the latter by a record 1% over the last 6 months. Gas at the pump shows no real indication it is not going to rise further.
Talking about things rising and falling, when I was back in Malaysia in the mid 80s I observed with deep interest the inverse relationship between the stock market prices and a guy’s pants. When one goes up the other comes down.
I thought that would be a good topic for my Ph.D thesis – until I met a man whose pants kept dropping down even though the stock market was down. I met the guy always at the same Health Center and asked him why. He said he did it to decompress!
Kawan from Wat Siam - June 17, 2008 at 4:51 pm
Err … both actually!
Kawan from Wat Siam! I twinned that!
I don’t wear pants anymore! It’s sarong lah!
But harvests in India and China are promising. Don’t, eat too much glutten-laden wheat. Rice is better. Most type of rice don’t have any.
Conditions/diseases caused by glutten affect our natural auto-immunity system. Eg. your body refuses to recognise sugar and you have diabetes. There’s even an interesting thing about soya.
Soya, incorrectly processed and prepared, slowly kills the eater—that’s you, Man! Apparently, if you eat all of the soya, mana ada lagi? Dia orang pun nak hidup! So mana ada propagation lah!!!? But Indonesians have culturally developed “tempel” whose fermentation procedures save the day.
You should try instead relating high crude prices which could immoblise transport, cause power cuts and blackouts, etc., to the sale of viagra, cialis, condoms and the national birth or death rates!
When you’re done, I’ll give you a permanent award you can’t even forget!
!
Salak - June 19, 2008 at 3:11 am
Din,
Would you email me info , so I can get somebody to pick up a copy?
I was thinking of selling it, to defray some costs!
Hey, that’s legit, ain’t it?
Salak - June 19, 2008 at 3:18 am
[...] Dr. Syed, of course, is among the Malaysian scholars that I admire most. I wish I had been able to attend his book launch and listen to his speech. Thanks to the Internet and the flourishing blogsphere, I can now read it online* while being away from Malaysia. (http://dinmerican.wordpress.com/2008/06/17/dr-syed-husins-speech-at-launch-of-the-malays-their-probl…) [...]
The Micah Mandate : Mandat Mikha » Blog Archive » MCA ≠ Chinese, Umno ≠ Malays, and etc… - November 13, 2008 at 3:35 pm