Archive for the ‘BornInMalaysia’ category

Goodbye Shabeery…maybe not

July 15th, 2008
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Well, I guess Information Minister Shabery Cheek will be handing in his resignation tomorrow. I saw first 20 minutes of the debate only, but gave me a good idea of how it went on. I personally don’t trust both the debaters, but from the point of debating and handling the questions, I think the more popular guy had the edge.

Later from 10.20 till 10.40 pm surfed the net for initial responses. Nothing appeared on Star, Malaysiakini or NST sites, but 7 blogs were returned in Google blog search. All mentioned the samething, which I rather not write in here. But i guess the post title above clears the air.

As for the papers, I was wondering how the papers will write it since many, many Malaysians would have seen the debate. No chance to lie or twist the article. Malaysiakini and NST were first to report at about 10.50pm. NST declared no winner, while Malaysiakini did not talk about the content of the debate.

Hmm..wait a minute, didn’t Shabery say he will leave his fate in the hands of the PM? Can see a lifeline there.

Dr Subra on PSD scholarship, government jobs and cabinet committee

July 14th, 2008
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Dr. S.Subramaniam suggests that the interview and extra-curricular criteria to be abolished when handing out PSD scholarships. He says:

No matter how good you are at your ECA or your interview performance, you should not be eligible for a scholarship for tertiary education with low academic results

In other words, scholarships awards should be purely on academic results. This may be problematic since generally those from affluent families have better chance of doing better. Why not do it like this – minimum 9A for those family income below RM3000, minimum 12As for those with family income between RM3001 and RM8000, and minimum 14As for those from family earning above RM8001.

However, he goes on to say that all Indians students who score 9As and above in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia will be given government scholarships, starting this year, to pursue their studies in local government universities and four local private institutions — Monash, Swinburne, Curtin and Nottingham universities. MIC had also asked the government to include the Asian Institute of Medicine, Science and Technology in this scheme. This was decided during the first meeting of the Special Committee for Indian Related Affairs chaired by Najib. Human Resources Ministry is the secretariat for the committee.

“Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak has agreed in terms of policy and we are now in the process of formalising it.”

The problem with this suggestion is that the other communities may demand the same. After all, we are moving towards equal rights. Unless of course, the privileged community gets scholarship for much lower results, in which case they won’t complain. But the Chinese community will be upset that their students who get 9As don’t get similar deal.

Rest of the committee members are: MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, Dr Subramaniam, MIC deputy ministers, finance and education ministers, Public Service Department director-general, representatives from ministries related to problems faced by the Indian community and multi-agency committees.

Some of the outcomes of the first meeting has been highlighted before, but some new ones are below:

– University intake for Indian students in critical courses to be increased. Eight per cent of PSD scholarships were given to
Indians to study medicine and law. The committee was seeking more
places for Indians wishing to pursue programmes in dentistry, pharmacy,
accountancy and architecture

– A relook at the appeal of Indian students who achieved about 3.0 CGPA grading but did not get university places.

But remember, Najib said that university intake for this year will not be reviewed. He advised students to study harder. Not sure which is which now.

Another area Dr. S.Subramaniam ventured is the civil service. He said of the 16,000 Indians who applied for government jobs last year, only 1,500 were offered postings.

“It’s not true that non-Malays are not applying for civil service posts,” he said, adding that the percentage of Indians in the civil service should be increased from the five to eight per cent.

“We want Indians not only in lower-category jobs but also in higher categories. PSD has been cooperative in furnishing the MIC with information on vacancies in the civil service,” said Dr Subramaniam, who is also MIC secretary-general.

Perhaps PSD will publish such statistics – breakdown by job category, state, age, gender etc.

The next statement filled my heart with joy!

Dr Subramaniam said MIC was also working hard to improve Indian equity in the capital market from 1.1 per cent to 1.5 per cent within the next three years.

While the government is aiming for 1.5 percent in 2020, MIC is planning to turbo-boost it in 3 years. That is indeed a great challenge and one that can revive the community’s faith a bit. The easiest way is to get a big allocation from government, like maybe RM5 billion and offer it to the community via PNB. Immediate cash injection and the equity will be boosted. Just left with a small matter of asking for allocation.

film censorship

July 14th, 2008
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I had an interesting day today. When a movie involves other religions than Islam, FINAS invites the respective religious bodies (like Hindu Sangam) to give their views on it. This is a good move to ensure that the views of the religious organisations are taken into consideration before releasing the movie for public viewing. Can’t say much more than that. Oh ya…i saw a movie today 🙂

Immigration corruption is just the tip of the iceberg?

July 13th, 2008
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Another off-topic posting.

Ask around your friends, relatives, anyone – what is the perception of corruption in the government departments? Will you be surprised with the reply you get? This is the perception (not necessarily the truth) that people have. Immigration, Road Transport (JPJ), Customs, Police, and even the ACA themselves are viewed with a suspicious eye.

The recent arrest of top two Immigration officers plus another 20 or so people had caught the interest of the nation. Why now? From what I heard, it started with the many stranded Bangladeshi workers in Bangladesh itself who can’t enter the country because the “calling visa” were not issue over here. The reason is because the previous minister (Syed Radzi) is not around anymore (it seems he had authority to issue approval via computerized system) and had been replaced by new minister (Syed Hamid Albar),  after the general elections . Suffice to say that the responsibility of approving these visas were passed around until someone agreed to handle it. In the meantime, the agents and businessmen were stuck because they had taken payment from Bangladeshi counterparts and the workers were not able to come in. (The role of previous minister, government officers etc. is not covered here, but you guys are welcomed to ask any agents or runners that deal with Immigration dept. They have many many stories to tell, without giving proof of course.)

Secondly, when tourists from China were caught with 6 months visa extension during raids in Penang, few months back, the authorities were baffled with the original stamping in the passports. This triggered investigations, and the result is what we read in papers. I saw that Chinese paper splashed photos of the DG and his deputy, while some like NST blurred the pictures.

As of today, I heard that investigation have been expanded to the “pembantu rumah” (domestic help” section and ACA is all over the house of the directors and in HQ. I hope that the ACA is able to track back into the last 10 years, and not just focus on current officers.

I think just by interviewing the runners and agents, ACA can probably arrest a big number of Immigration staff. Just send some guys as undercover for few months to built up the case. If even public like us can get some much information and end up frightened with the size of corruption from the counter services right up to the top person, surely the ACA can do better.

I got this all this information from a guy who is an agent that deals with foreign worker employment. Was talking to him casually today. He had no reason to lie, but maybe he heard the stories from other agents or officers. Not sure how true it is, but “charges” for a calling visa approval is RM350/worker. Renewal of visa application (valid for 4 months) is about RM200.

How can graft be overcome? One way is to automate processes, integrate with systems from other departments/agencies and reduce human intervention. There should be minimal approval power in hands of individuals.

There was an interesting observation in the Star today. Why don’t ministers take responsibility for the mistakes, crime, negligence or shortcomings that happen in the agencies under their portfolio? Instead some government officer is the one who is punished. The writer refers to the Westminister principle of ministerial responsibility:

The Westminster principle of individual ministerial responsibility,
however, is probably of greater concern to Malaysians. It is explained
by Rodney Brazier in his 1997 book, Ministers of the Crown:

“Broadly, each Minister is responsible for

(1) his private conduct,

(2) the general conduct of his department, and

(3) acts done (or left undone) by officials in his department.”

Example of the first case is resignation of Chua Soi Lek over his personal conduct. It seems 125 British minister resigned in the last century, with a dozen for private scandals and two from private financial arrangements.

But case (2) and (3) is more important.

More from the article:

As Noore Alam Siddiquee of South Australia’s Flinders University wrote in 2006 in the International Public Management Review,
“the principle of ministerial responsibility as seen in mature
democracies is either weak or missing in Malaysia. The principle means
that the minister accepts responsibility for any lapses or
irregularities within his ministry and resigns from the office.

“Despite
reports of numerous irregularities in various agencies at different
levels, misappropriation of funds by individuals and groups and
increasing volume of complaints received from the public on the quality
of services and responsiveness, rarely has a minister chosen to accept
responsibility for such irregularities.”

Siddiquee points out
that despite the 2004 public outcry over shoddy construction projects,
the then Works Minister “not only rebuffed calls for him to step down,
he practically took no responsibility for the defective projects and
other anomalies, and has had no problem retaining his ministerial
office.”

But Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu was able to rebuff those
calls for resignation – which came not just from civil society groups
and Opposition lawmakers, but also from BN backbenchers – in large part
due to the unwillingness of his Cabinet colleagues to apply the
doctrine of individual ministerial responsibility to him, perhaps lest
they themselves be judged by the same standards.

In Cabinet Governing in Malaysia
(2006), Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim reveals how they protected Samy Vellu:
“Finally, after what was a prolonged episode that almost cost him his
job, the Cabinet found that he took it upon himself more than he should
have shouldered. The Cabinet session of 20th October 2004, chaired
by Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Sri Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak,
discussed at length the background of this public outcry. Datuk Seri
Samy Vellu’s extensive reports to the session were noted by the Cabinet
with the view that the Minister ought not to take it upon himself all
the blame hurled by the public as there were various parties that were
responsible like consultants, contractors, engineers, architects, etc.”

Following
this logic, it would appear that a Minister only need resign if he were
a one-man ministry, doing everything himself. In reality other parties,
whether external or in the civil service, are always there to take the
blame.

Do you remember when was the last time a minister resigned (other that Chua Soi Lek)? Feel free to share.

Review of PSD Scholarship quota

July 11th, 2008
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After it was revealed that this year, 45% of the PSD’s 2000 scholarships are being allocated to normal Malaysians, few extremist groups were unhappy and quite vocal about it. For the last decade, the normal Malaysians have been marginalized by only being allocated 10% of the scholarship, but this is conveniently left out during the argument.

Today’s Star (hard copy) said allocation for normal Malaysians were 50% while its online version mentioned 45%. Actually 5% is for “others”, 45% for normal Malaysians, and 50% for privileged Malaysians. Not sure who is the others are. Non-Malaysians?

Some groups said the allocation should reflect the population breakdown. Does it mean breakdown of privileged/normal Malaysians, or by race (Malays, Indians, Chinese, Dayaks, Kadazans, Orang Asli, etc). We have to be careful here because sometimes the terms bumiputera and Malay are liberally interchanged in use depending on the advantage it brings.

Most disappointingly, the quota will be reviewed, as mentioned by Najib.

My take: offer it only for those who deserve it by merit and family financial background. PSD perhaps can announce that it will offer scholarship for those who get 12A1s and family income is below RM3000 for the comin SPM examinations. In this way, students will know in advance what they should aim for.