Archive for the ‘Indian’ category

Lim Kit Siang – PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian

May 7th, 2007
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PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian Indians in California


PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian Indians in California
The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi should reprimand and discipline the Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation Datuk Seri Dr. Jamaludin Jarjis for his disgraceful conduct in making racist and derogatory remarks about Malaysian Indians when he met Malaysian students in California on Monday (30th April).
During his official visit to California on Monday, Jamaludin met some of the Malaysian students studying in California especially the ones from TPM Academy twinning programme at the Belacan Grill Malaysian Restaurant, Redondo Beach, Ca.
One of the students was Sheena Moorthy, a third-year Biotech Malaysian student in CALYPOLY.
Sheena complained that during the 3 ½ hour session, Jamaludin passed a few racial remarks on her, being one of the two Indians present there.
Sheena has formally written to the Prime Minister to complain against Jamaludin for the “totally uncalled-for racial insults”, citing the following instances:
Incident 1 – Each student had to briefly introduce themselves. When it came to her turn, while speaking he interrupted her and asked if she knew Samy Vellu, because he knows him. She did not see any relevance in that and he mentioned it a few times for no apparent reason.
Incident 2 – He gave a speech regarding how agriculture started in Malaysia. He mentioned how the British invested in Malaysia and made farmers work. Due to the lack of work force, “buruh India” was brought in. While mentioning this, he looked at her saying “that’s how we get Indians in Malaysia”.
Incident 3 – After saying he is going to get MARA to help the Bumiputra students, he looked at her and asked “How many Indians are here?” Sheena did not keep track of number of Indian students so she mentioned that in the room there were two (pointing to another Malaysian Indian friend, who is fair skinned) and Jamaludin looked at him and asked “Oh. You are an Indian? Which means you are an upper class Indian and she is the lower class one” (pointing at her). Jamaludin went on to say that, “Oh, I am not going to help upper class Indians, I only help the lower class ones. They are the ones that need it’.
Sheena left the room feeling very insulted as the Minister had judged her based on her skin colour.
This incident happened in front of a crowd of about 100 people including students, officials from the Malaysian Consulate, TPM, Tourism Malaysia, etc. But everyone is afraid and nobody is prepared to stand up to speak the truth.
I can fully understand Sheena’s hurt feelings at being humiliated and insulted by Jamaluddin in public. All right-thinking Malaysians should support Sheena’s demand for a public apology from Jamaludin.
Sheena’s sister, Dr. Sheela Moorthy, who is currently living in the USA and supporting her sister’s education at CalyPoly, is so incensed that she has written to the media to express her disgust and anger that a Minister of a multi-racial country should be making such racist and derogatory remarks about Malaysian Indians at a function abroad, giving the country a bad image.
Sheena has also written to complain about Jamaluddi’s biased and disgraceful conduct to several Malaysian Ministers, including the MIC President and Works Minister, Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
I hope Samy Vellu would raise the Sheena issue at the Cabinet meeting next Wednesday to add his voice to the growing demand for public apology from Jamaludin and to support the Prime Minister to reprimand and take disciplinary action against the Science, Technlogy and Innovation Minister.
Jamaludin is still in the United States as he is currently leading a 300-man Malaysian delegation to the Biotechnology Industry Organisation (BIO) Convention in Boston, Massachussets.

NEWS:Usage of Tamil language fast declining

May 7th, 2007
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Usage of Tamil language fast declining
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/7/nation/17650719&sec=nation
IN a special report, Makkal Osai, said that according to Unesco, Tamil language usage was declining throughout the world.
The reasons cited were modernisation, changes in culture and the influence of Western ideas.
There was also no motivation or research done to promote the wider usage of Tamil worldwide.
The report said that there were about 12.3 million Tamils in the world and only 7.4 million used Tamil. The rest did not know how to read, write or even speak Tamil.
A survey conducted by Unesco in 2000 revealed that 1.7 million had no knowledge of Tamil and this figure will go up by 3.2% in the next six years.
The report attributed the decline to parents not encouraging their children to use Tamil. It also said that many schools in South India, where Tamil is predominantly spoken, were now giving more importance to English.
M. Ravindran, secretary of the Johor Silambam Association said that parents in Malaysia should be encouraged to enrol children in Tamil schools if the language was to be passed on to the next generation.
Tamil researcher Dr Purushothaman said that Tamil organisations should organise awareness campaigns to highlight the importance of Tamil so that Tamils could take pride in their own language.

Good showing raises Tamil school enrollment

May 3rd, 2007
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April 29, 2007
Good showing raises Tamil school stock By : CHOK SUAT LING
The good facilities at SJK(T) Jalan Bangsar help attract students.
More Indian students from educated and middle-income families are making Tamil schools their choice, educationists tell CHOK SUAT LING
The good facilities at SJK(T) Jalan Bangsar help attract students.
HE owns a successful business, and drives a sleek, eye-catching, black Volvo. R. Ravindran could certainly afford to enrol his two children in a private school.
But he sent them instead to a Tamil school in Kajang.
Asked why he chose vernacular education, Ravindran shrugs: “Many Indian parents now are doing the same. Most of my children’s classmates are from urban, educated, middle-income backgrounds. “Indian parents want their children to learn their mother tongue and be educated in schools that are sensitive to their needs.”
Ravindran enrolled his older son in a national school for two years but transferred him out when he was 10 years old.
“The boy was uncomfortable with a few things, like the doa during the morning assembly.”
Historically linked to the Indian labour sector, the 523 Tamil schools in Malaysia today are widely perceived to have low student enrolment, and to be populated by those from lower-income backgrounds.
That observation is apparently no longer accurate.
Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Tamil Jalan Bangsar headmaster A. Janarthana notes that there has been a gradual increase in the number of students from “more affluent” backgrounds in his school over the past 10 years.
“These are the students from families with a monthly income of more than RM3,000. Their parents are educated and professionals like lawyers and doctors, or from the business world. There has been a 10 per cent increase of such students from last year, but it is still not as much as we want.”
Tamil schools appear to be gaining popularity. There are now schools in urban areas with between 1,000 and 2,000 students, an unheard of phenomenon in past decades.
The Tamil Foundation Malaysia (TFM), a non-profit organisation set up in 1990 to help Indian students through education, has the statistics.
TFM executive director Jiwi Kathaiah says in 2005, Tamil school enrolment numbered 98,579, but this year, there are already more than 100,000 students.
There are several factors driving Indian parents towards Tamil schools. Among them are academic excellence, cultural familiarity and belonging, and exposure to their mother tongue.
Kathaiah, who is also Tamil school educated, notes that despite the odds, the academic performance of students in Tamil schools has improved.
“Numerous studies and research favour mother tongue education,” says Kathaiah.
“According to Unesco (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation), students taught to read in their mother tongue acquire academic learning skills more quickly.”
According to Education Ministry statistics, the percentage of passes for all subjects in the Primary School Assessment Test, or UPSR, among Tamil school students, has improved over the years.
For Mathematics, only 67 per cent passed in 1998, but that went up to 84.4 per cent in 2004. The most impressive gain was in Bahasa Malaysia (writing), from 32 per cent in 1998 to 56.3 per cent in 2004.
The number of high achievers has also gone up significantly. In 1999, 45 students scored the maximum 7As. Last year, 570 achieved that feat.
Kathaiah says this proves that the Tamil school system is no longer the “weakest link in the academic system”, as it was once described.
There are difficulties adjusting to the national school system at the secondary level but Tamil schools have taken steps to cushion the initial language and culture shock experienced by students.
Many schools organise motivational sessions for Year Six pupils who have completed their UPSR.
Another reason why more Indian parents are turning to Tamil schools is the perceived Islamisation of national schools.
Janarthana observes that Indian students can identify better with the values imparted in Tamil schools, as they are the same as those at home:
“When they are comfortable with their environment, they feel liberated and can study better.”
Yayasan Strategik Sosial executive director Datuk Dr Denison Jayasooria notes a sociological trend among fourth or fifth generation migrant communities to return to their roots
“It is a global phenomenon with no adverse effects,” Jayasooria says.
The fact that Science and Mathematics is now taught in English is another pull factor.
“Indian parents feel their children can get the best of everything in Tamil schools — they have Tamil language as a subject, besides Bahasa Melayu and English, and both Science and Mathematics is in English.
“And on top of it, they are in an environment which adheres to their culture, ethos, history and identity,” he adds.
The Education Ministry is aware of the increase in enrolment in Tamil schools.
“We have statistics of the rise in student numbers. But it is not viewed as a threat to national schools. It will not in any way affect our drive to make national schools the school of choice,” says an official.
He points out that the ministry has taken many steps to make national schools more attractive, including offering Tamil and Chinese language on a wider scale in national schools soon.
TFM president Manoharan Marimuthu agrees Tamil schools are neither a threat to national schools nor work against national integration.
“The two education streams actually complement the other. As for racial polarisation, the gulf among the races now is not a product of the vernacular school system. There are other factors at play.
“In fact, the existence of a parallel system which supports another language and culture is testament of our country’s unique diversity,” says Manoharan.
The government should, therefore, recognise the progress made in the Tamil school system and respect and support it, he argues, and Tamil schools should not continue to be treated like “stepchildren”.
“While the support of parents has helped uplift some schools, many remain in a sad state of neglect.”
Jayasooria agrees it is important to recognise the strength of Tamil schools, and fill in the gaps where there are weaknesses to ensure a level playing field.
He, too, insists there is no conclusive evidence to show that vernacular schools contribute towards problematic ethnic relations.
In fact, he says: “Immediate steps should be taken to convert all partially-assisted Tamil schools into fully government-aided ones.”
Another strategy to improve the condition of Tamil schools is to encourage parents from middle and upper socio-economic levels to send their children to Tamil schools in force, then demand and ensure that proper facilities are provided.
Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) commissioner Datuk N. Siva Subramaniam points out that one Tamil school, SJK (Tamil) Simpang Lima, Klang, has been named a cluster school: “Parents should send their children there and to other Tamil schools.”
Jayasooria is confident this will happen.
“The people’s consciousness of their identity has increased. And this should be recognised as a positive development, not a problem.”
Ratha Mathivanan

NEWS:Kamala tipped for Selangor exco post

May 1st, 2007
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Kamala tipped for Selangor exco post
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Tuesday/National/20070501084029/Article/index_html
KLANG: Seri Andalas assemblywoman Kamala Ganapathy is expected to be appointed a state executive councillor, taking over the place of the late Datuk K. Sivalingam.
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said he submitted the name of the nominee to Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo last night.
But he declined to confirm if the choice was second-term assemblywoman Kamala, saying the prerogative to appoint an exco member rested with Dr Khir.
The other MIC representatives in the legislative assembly are Datuk V. Jagarasah (Batu Caves) and Ijok assemblyman K. Parthiban.
On the Ijok by-election, he said the party learnt a good lesson in that it should not take things for granted. “The opposition will make a strong challenge in all our constituencies as they think we are weak and can be beaten.” He said he would visit all constituencies under MIC to learn of their problems and activities, especially steps to fulfil election promises.
“I want all branch chairmen to be united and raise their problems with their assemblymen. Division chiefs should have good working relationships with branch chairmen.
“When they hold meetings, there should be a serious discussion on the problems faced by the Indian community and ways to raise their standard, and not just a chat over a cup of tea,” he said.

NEWS:Option to buy houses for estate workers

April 27th, 2007
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Option to buy houses for estate workers

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/27/nation/17558640&sec=nation

IJOK: Workers of three estates belonging to Kuala Lumpur Kepong (KLK) Bhd will be able to own single-storey terrace houses after KLK implements the housing schemes. 

MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said the company had already agreed to implement the scheme after obtaining the approval from the relevant authorities. 

“The workers in Tuan Mee, Caledonia and Coalfield estates will be the main beneficiaries,” he told voters at a community centre. 

Tuan MeeÂ’s senior manager Chuan Chong Meng, National Union of Plantation Workers general secretary Datuk G. Sankaran, MIC deputy president Datuk G. Palanivel and other MIC leaders were present.  

Samy Vellu said the estate workers had put forward a proposal for the houses two days ago. 

“This is how the Barisan Nasional Government works. We discuss and got the approvals within a short time for the benefit of the estate people,” he said. 

Samy Vellu said estate workers who wanted to upgrade their houses or even own bungalows could do so after discussions with the company, which is constructing the houses. 

He said that there would also be other infrastructure like schools, temples and a playing field that would help to upgrade the standard of living of the people. 

Officials said the estate workers would be given priority to buy the houses at RM35,000 while others would have to pay RM42,000 for the two-room houses.