Ragu still dreaming of MyKad

Ragu who was asked to obtain letter from Perak Sultan, got his temporary identification document yesterday, after the Sultan summoned those involved to settle this problem. However, Ragu knows that having temporary ID is meaningless as he still like a bankrupt:

Ragu also wondered if his fate would change after he got his temporary ID.

He said that the solution to his problem would be getting his MyKad.

“Many years ago, I held a similar temporary ID but I struggled to get work because companies, factories and enterprises asked me to produce my MyKad.

“Will things really change now for me and my family? No, not even a little, I believe.

“What is the use of re-issuing a temporary ID? I can’t open a bank account, buy a prepaid mobile phone card, own a car or have anything to my name.

“My situation is worse than a bankrupt.”

He had tried 8 times before this, but unsuccessful. Ragu, who was abandoned by his parents when he was 4, only has an incomplete birth certificate issued in 1998 indicating that he was born in Bagan Serai, near Taiping, to one Rajamani. Because the certificate has no other details about his parents, the NRD only issued a temporary ID which was valid until 2004 when the Home Ministry decided to stop issuing them. His eight attempts to apply for a MyKad since 1998 failed because he cannot prove that he was born here.

Ragu hopes that his problem will end with him, and his children will grow up as citizens. Going by the current situation, his concerns are real enough, since if he can prove his citizenship, his children will be in limbo:

The words that came out of 33-year-old R. Ragu sounded like they were plucked out of Martin Luther King Jr’s famous speech, I Have A Dream.
“I have a dream that my four children will one day live in this country as respected citizens.

“That they will be called Malaysians, and that they will not be made stateless like their father,” said Ragu at the National Registration Department (NRD), here, yesterday.

Speaking to the New Straits Times after obtaining his new temporary identification document, the father of three, who is expecting his fourth child soon, said he hoped his children would not suffer the same fate because of his stateless status.

His eldest daughter is now 9 and Ragu is worried that she would not be given a MyKad when she turns 12.
“If I, her father, had no MyKad and am not accepted as a citizen of this country, will the National Registration Department accept my eldest daughter as a citizen?

“Will my two younger daughters get to live as Malaysians? Will my unborn fourth suffer the same fate?”

“I hope the government will give me MyKad before my eldest daughter turns 12,” he said, adding that the temporary ID expires in September 2010.

The guy still had the time to thank all those who have helped him:

Despite his stateless predicament, Ragu is grateful that there were people who helped him.

“Although what I got was not what I had wished for, I am still very grateful to Sultan Azlan Shah, the New Straits Times, state exco member A. Sivanesan and Kuala Kangsar municipal councillor S. Thiagarajan who have helped me in their own way.

By poobalan on September 30, 2008 · Posted in BornInMalaysia, Indian

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