Posts Tagged ‘Perak’

What actually happened during the 1969 tragedy

May 14th, 2007
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May 11, 07 1:11pm
The series of events surrounding the ‘May 13′ riot has been documented by Dr Kua Kia Soong in his latest book May 13: Declassified Documents on the Malaysian Riots of 1969 which will be launched on Sunday in conjunction with the 38th anniversary of the tragedy.
This compilation, based on various sets of foreign dispatches and confidential reports at the time – which were declassified recently and made available at the Public Records Office in London – has been dubbed as the first credible account on the incident.
“The real circumstances surrounding the worst racial riot in the history of Malaysia have so far not been made available to the Malaysian public. The official version is fraught with contradictions and inadequacies to which few pay credence,” Kua wrote in the book.
Below are excerpts and summary of the chronology of events based on the declassified documents taken from Kua’s book:
May 10:
The ruling Alliance Party suffered a major setback in the general election although it had managed to retain a simple parliamentary majority. They had lost Penang to the Gerakan Party; Kelantan to the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party while Perak and Selangor were at the brink of falling into the opposition’s hands.
May 11 and May 12:
On both nights, the opposition celebrated their victory. A large Gerakan procession was held to welcome the left-wing Gerakan leader V David back from winning the federal seat in Penang.
May 13:
The MCA which had suffered badly at the polls, announced that it would withdraw from the cabinet while remaining within the Alliance.
A dispatch from a foreign correspondent showed it is evident that there was a plan for youths mobilised by Umno elements to assemble at then Selangor menteri besar Harun Idris’ residence in the late afternoon. A retaliatory march had been planned although police permission was withheld.
When people were still assembling for the parade, trouble broke out in the nearby Malay section of Kampung Baru, where two Chinese lorries were burnt. The ensuing carnage at Kampung Baru and Batu Road quickly spread elsewhere in Kuala Lumpur.
The foreign correspondent noted the curfew that was imposed was not fairly applied to all.
“In the side streets off Jalan Hale, I could see bands of Malay youths armed with parangs and sharpened bamboo spears assembled in full view of troops posted at road junctions. Meanwhile, at Batu Road, a number of foreign correspondents saw members of the Royal Malay Regiment firing into Chinese shophouses for no apparent reason.”
Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman immediately attributed the violence as triggered off by the behaviour of opposition supporters after the election result announcement while his deputy Tun Abdul Razak pinned the blame on the communists.
May 14:
The riots continued but on a smaller scale. The curfew was only lifted in staggered hours in various districts to allow people to buy food. The police called out all possible reserves and handed over the northern part of the city to the army.
Police put casualties for the previous night incident at 44 killed and about 150 injured. Another dispatch showed the casualties were mainly Chinese as it stated that out of 77 corpses in the morgue of the General Hospital on May 14, at least 60 were Chinese.
The government’s attempts to blame the communists for the riots were however not taken seriously by the officials at the British High Commission (BHC) who could see that the Tunku was not prepared to blame his own people for the riots, nor was he going to blame it on the Chinese “as a whole”.
May 15:
The King proclaimed a state of emergency. The National Operations Council headed by Tun Razak was formed. Tun Razak was still responsible to the Tunku, but all the powers under Emergency Regulations were vested in him.
The curfew had been lifted temporarily in Kuala Lumpur that morning but the situation had rapidly worsened and more sporadic fighting had broken out. Curfews were re-imposed but food was very short.
The local press was suspended until censorship regulations could be drawn up but no attempt was made to supervise reports sent out by foreign correspondents.
May 16:
The situation was still tense in Selangor with cars and houses being burned and fatalities rising. Death tolls had risen to 89 with over 300 injured. 24 hour curfew remained in force in Selangor and had also been imposed in Malacca. In Penang and Perak, the situation had improved although the curfew remained in force.
Tunku made a broadcast in which he announced the setting up of a National Defence Force to be manned by volunteers. The new information minister Hamzah Abu Samah and Tun Razak gave a press conference pinning the blame for the riots on communist infiltration of the opposition parties.
There were reports of looting by the largely Malay military and their bias against the Chinese Malaysians. Number of refugees were increasing.
May 17:
From a BHC telegram, it showed there were skepticism among British officers toward the official figures for fatalities and the preponderance of Chinese casualties among the dead. The police estimated the deaths at about 100 now while British officers estimated the proportion of Chinese to Malay casualties is about 85:15.
The press censorship invited criticism not only from the local press but also in diplomatic circles especially when official statements lacked clarity and credibility.
In a confidential BHC memorandum to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), the coup d’etat has been acknowledged and it has effected the transfer of power not only to “Malay hands” but also to the security forces. The latter’s professionalism is questioned.
The BHC also noted the Federal Reserve Unit, which at the time was multiracial in composition, was the more impartial of the security forces while the Malay troops were discriminatory in enforcing the curfew.
“Discriminatory takes the form, for example, of not, repeat not, enforcing the curfew in one of the most violently disposed of the Malay areas in Kuala Lumpur (Kampung Baru) where Malays armed with parangs, etc continue to circulate freely; with the inevitable result that gangs slip through the cordon round the area and attack Chinese outside it. In Chinese areas, the curfew is strictly enforced.”
May 18:
The Tunku qualified his earlier assertion that the disturbances were caused by communists, putting the blame instead on assorted “bad elements”. He also announced the deferment of the Sarawak elections and the continuance of the restrictions on the movement of foreign journalists.
The situation was still unsettled in some parts of the capital city.
May 19:
Less than a week after the riots, the reins of power had effectively passed to Tun Razak, indicating that there had been a plot to bring about the coup d’etat.
“The exact relationship between Tun Razak and the Tunku is not clear. In public Tun Razak says he is directly responsible to the Tunku but he has made it clear privately that he is completely in charge of the country. This could mean the beginning of a process of withdrawal by the Tunku as an effective PM”.
There are some 10,000 reported refugees. The local press was allowed to publish under censorship while foreign journalists had their curfew passes withdrawn. Some opposition politicians were arrested.
May 20:
In a meeting, an Australian High Commissioner had suggested the opposition leaders should be given a role as peace maker but Tun Razak and Ghazali Shafie were firmly against this. “They considered opposition leaders would simply use such an opportunity to promote their own political views.”
The Malaysian Red Cross Society is continuing its daily feeding programme for refugees in various places and over 5,000 had received food supplies.
May 21:
The official statistics of casualties at this juncture were 137 killed (18 Malays), 342 injured, 109 vehicles burned, 118 buildings destroyed and 2,912 persons arrested who were mostly curfew breakers.
May 23:
The declassified documents reveal that Malay troops were not only fraternising with the Malay thugs but were discharging their firearms indiscriminately at Chinese shophouses as they went through the city.
“When confronted by foreign correspondents with reports of racial discrimination, Tun Razak flatly denied them. Following this, curfew passes issued to foreign journalists were withdrawn and reporters were ordered to remain indoors ‘for their own safety’.”
A foreign correspondent’s report showed the Malay hooligans were detested by the law-abiding Malays of Kampung Baru.
Internal security and home minister Tun Dr Ismail indicated that the Internal Security Act would be in future amended to “counter changing communist tactics”. It was disclosed that of the 3,699 arrested during the crisis, 952 were members of secret societies.
May 24:
Law and order has been re-established in Kuala Lumpur and the atmosphere in the town had improved. People were going back to work (in non- curfew hours) and the government offices were limbering into action. The curfew remained in force (from 3pm to 6.30am of the following day). The government was not ready to admit that it was armed Malay youth who had caused the disturbances.
May 27:
The Tunku was under pressure to resign as he was clearly incensed by foreign journalists’ speculations about his weakening position and got his private secretary to write a protest note to the BHC.
May 28:
A confidential report by the BHC to the FCO on this day observed the government’s attempts to blame the communists for the disturbances were an attempt to justify their new authoritarian powers.
June:
The riots had been under control but they were still sporadic outbreaks of civil disturbances. A BHC report noted violence erupted again in one part of Kuala Lumpur on the night of June 28 and 29, a number of houses were burnt and the casualties were officially given as five killed and 25 injured. Some disturbances toward the end of June also involved ethnic Indians.
July:
Renewed trouble in which one policeman was killed was quickly stopped from spreading in Kuala Lumpur by positive police action.
Tun Ismail’s firm stand in ordering the security forces to act firmly ‘without favour or discrimination’ to any communal group and the Tunku’s announcement of a National Goodwill Committee made up of politicians of all parties went some way toward allaying the fears of the people.
Tun Ismail also revealed the total arrests since May now stood at 8,114, comprising people “from all the major racial groups”. Of these, 4,192 had been charged in court, 675 released on bail, 1,552 unconditionally released and 1,695 preventively detained.
Situation in the Peninsula had improved substantially but tension remains high in sensitive areas of Malacca, Perak and Selangor.
Tension had begun to ease until Malay agitation connected with Tunku’s return to a position of influence and the removal of Dr Mahathir Mohamad from Umno’s general committee on July 12 had heightened it again. Malay university students petitioned for Tunku’s resignation and demonstrated on the campus.
*** TAKEN FROM A FWD MAIL***

Maybank should always be fair and just to all

May 12th, 2007
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“Fair and Just” as in universal type or slanted type? So what will cabinet do?
UMNO and those sticking to prevent equal opportunity are asking Maybank to enforce equity which will benefit Malays (well, no proof all bumis benefit, the original bumis are still deprived of development) and for all those with mixed parentage who cling on to the bumi status as a means of unfair competitive advantage. A blatant misuse of the status, i would say. And what equity? any tom dick and harry can calculate as he/she likes and say equity is 5%, 10%, 20%, 42%, or even 100%. Can we just believe it?
The rest of malaysia says Maybank’s action is wrong.
Cabinet can:
1. continue its stand – and suffer from selfish Malays’ condemnation 2. Revoke and allow maybank to do as it like – which is slap in the face and insult to all right thinking and mature malaysians. 3. maintain status quo, but maybank will enforce the ruling silently with support from UMNO and others.
Why this equity anyway? So that the chinese/indian/others can work hard and the selected few get free money? If you are good, business will come to you. if you are not, well… you need a tongkat, of course…to hide the weakness and inability.
Better if Maybank just say that will allow only 100% Malay law firms. Let’s see how many firms will get selected. You want to select your cronies, “give chance”, “share the economic pie”, and suffer possible loss due to legal incompetence? What would the shareholders say? We as shareholders only want the highest returns and not some flimsy rules which hinder from hiring the best.
From all the replies in the malay dailies, not a single comment touched on the excellent capabilities of their lawyers. Why? Maybe such things don’t exist? So, you want companies to pay for substandard service?


PM: Maybank must be fair to all
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/12/nation/17708737&sec=nation
KUALA LUMPUR: Maybank should always be “fair and just” to all, said Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.
The Prime Minister said the bank’s requirement that legal firms dealing with them must have a bumiputra partner with at least a 50% stake was never a government directive.
“It was their own internal administrative policy,” he said.
Following criticisms, the country’s biggest bank reversed this internal guideline and said it would elect its panel of lawyers based on efficiency, performance and merit, and not ethnic composition.
However, a Malay newspaper reported yesterday that Malay intellectuals were asking for Maybank to retain the 50% bumiputra stake requirement.
Asked about this, Abdullah, who is also Finance Minister, said there was “no need to ask Maybank to do this and that.”
“They know what is needed,” he added.
On Wednesday, the Cabinet directed Maybank, which is the country’s largest financial group, to withdraw its requirement following criticism from various groups including the MCA, Bar Council and the Associated Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
The groups had said the guidelines were discriminatory and that selection of law firms should be on merit and not ethnic composition.
MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Ka Ting said the Cabinet discussed the issue and considered the matter resolved.
On Thursday, Umno Youth chief Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein Onn said the Maybank issue should be a lesson to all Malaysians as the country was a multiracial one where a small thing could become sensitive.
Meanwhile, AmBank Group announced that all letters sent out to legal firms that stipulated the requirement of bumiputra equity participation had been withdrawn.
“We would also like to apologise for any misunderstanding caused by the letters which were issued over the last few days,” it said.
AmBank was also criticised for sending out letters to law firms requiring them to have a bumiputra partner.
Yesterday, Perak Malay Chamber of Commerce youth chairman Saiful Adli Mohd Arshad said the chamber fully supported Maybank’s requirement because it would help increase bumiputra equity, especially among professionals.
Catrade Sdn Bhd chief executive officer Datuk IIyas Mohamed said the Cabinet directive appeared to be inconsistent with its own policy of assisting Malays in getting their share in the distribution of the nation’s wealth.

NEWS:Among the perils of not registering your wedding…

May 10th, 2007
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Among the perils of not registering your wedding…
All dressed up but no school wants to take her By : Kamachy Habimanan
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Thursday/National/20070510075511/Article/index_html
JOHOR BARU: K. Raghathiswary diligently puts on her blue-and-white school pinafore every morning, but she does not get to go to school.
This is because no school will accept her.
The cause is her birth certificate which does not carry the name of her father, R. Kanagasundram, 30.
“It is tough trying to console her every day when she wakes up and gets dressed in her school uniform.
“Whenever the schoolbus stops in front of our neighbours’ homes and fetches their children, my daughter will start crying.” Kanagasundram said she was denied admission by schools in Johor Baru early this year as she did not have a birth certificate.
“I could not apply for my daughter’s birth certificate because my marriage was not registered. Moreover, my wife left us the day she gave birth to Raghathiswary.”
When his daughter could not get into a school, Kanagasundram took all the supporting documents and applied for a birth certificate.
However, when he received his daughter’s birth certificate, it did not carry his name as the father.
“I have been Raghathiswary’s guardian and I applied for her birth certificate but it does not carry my name as the father.
“The column which is supposed to carry my name says no information available.
“When I questioned the National Registration Department about this, they failed to give a proper explanation.”
He then tried to enrol Raghathiswary in a Tamil school in Johor Baru, but to no avail.
“I tried to enrol her in other schools in Johor Baru and my sister tried to do so in Perak, but no school wants to accept her.
“I hope someone can help my daughter. I don’t want her to be an illiterate.”
Johor Education Department director Mokhy Saidon promised to look into the matter.
“If it is just an issue over a birth certificate, there should not be any problem for Raghathiswary to get a place in school.”

SV – ‘I have proof Anwar did not help Indian tradersÂ’

May 7th, 2007
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‘I have proof Anwar did not help Indian traders’
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Monday/National/20070507081920/Article/index_html
SHAH ALAM: Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu’s claim that he can prove how Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim ignored the needs of Indians while in government is no empty boast.
The MIC chief still has the letters of rejection issued by the Parti Keadilan Rakyat leader to members of the Indian business community who had applied for opportunities to better themselves.
“For nine years, he rejected all applications from the Indian business community and I have the letters to prove it,” he said after opening the general assemblies of MIC Wanita, Pemuda and Puteri 2007 at Dewan Jubli Perak.
He said Anwar, who was the former deputy prime minister, was out of touch with reality and had no grounds to accuse the MIC of neglecting the needs of Indians.
“He never helped the community while in government,” he said in rejecting Anwar’s allegations made in Malaysiakini. On the defeat of Parti Keadilan Rakyat candidate Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim in the Ijok by-election, he said Indian voters wanted to teach him a lesson as he had also ignored the needs of Indians.
‘The reality is this. He (Khalid) had forced Indian workers off estates. I have the photographs to prove this.”
Samy Vellu also rejected allegations that the Barisan Nasional had used money politics to win by-elections.
He said the Indians had found their feet in business and other sectors with the Barisan Nasional government, reducing the number of Indians in estates from 80 per cent to 38 per cent.
“Opportunities for Indians to obtain higher education followed by jobs have brought changes to the community.”
Samy Vellu added that the MIC was evolving with new leaders coming to the forefront to work with veterans.
“This is a healthy trend with young leaders like new Ijok assemblyman, K. Parthiban, emerging to enhance the party leadership.”
Earlier, Samy Vellu said Wanita MIC should look into the plight of the 10,000 single Indian mothers who were largely in dire straits

Background of 9 Indian Recipients of the Honda award

April 27th, 2007
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Nine Young Malaysian Indian Dreamers Web Master Nine Indians were successful in securing the Honda Dreams Fund Award. This constitutes 45 percent of the total award recipients. As someone recently indicated that Indian youths are among the most needy group in Malaysia, as they have less access to other types of funding.
The Honda awards are generous as they would provide for the total fees and living expenditure for the course of their choice, which is closely linked to their dream. Honda does not have requirements to pay back after the period of study as the individual is free to pursue once own dream.
Honda on April 25, 2007 released the details of all the recipients to the press. YSS webmaster is providing this information to inspire other young people to do likewise especially look for the next opportunity for the Honda Dream Fund.
Subash Loganathan is 20 years old from Selangor and has completed his Form 6. His dream is to be in the forefronts of planning, management and administration. His father passed away eight years ago and his family is dependent on the SOSCO funds. He is a young person with excellent leadership potential.
Anusheya Suppiah is 19 years old and she has completed her SPM. She is also from Selangor. Her dream is to become a Software programmer/engineer. Both her parents who are disabled. She started working in a clinic to save for her studies.
Jaswant Singh is also from Selangor, originally from Kampong Ghandi in PJ and he too is 19. His dream is to be a pilot. His father passed away when he was 14 years old and his mother who works in a factory supports the family now. He had secured a place in the flying academy but had to postpone it due to insufficient funds.
Arun Kumar Ramasamy has got the dream of becoming an inventor. He developed this interest since an early age when he used to play LEGO. He too is from Selangor but 20 years old. Has completed his STPM has the dream of undertaking a mechatronic engineering course.
Jasmir Singh Sandhu has the dream of becoming an economist. He is 20 and is from Kuala Lumpur. His parents were separated when he was only nine months old and his mother has been very ill for a long while. “It’s my dream, to acquire an economics and management degree so that I may enhance my capabilities to make a difference”, he said.
Kaviarasu Ponggavanom is from Perak and he is 22 years of age. His father passed away when he was only one year old and it is his mum who works at Bethany home raised him up. His dream is to be a biotechnologist. He was inspired by the PM and the emphasis in the Ninth Malaysia Plan for future scope and the potential of biotechnology.
Kavitha Krishnamurti has a childhood dream of being a doctor. She is from Negeri Sembilan and is 20 years old. She has been working at a clinic in Sermeban while waiting for her Form 6 results. Her father is a security guard and mum a housewife. While she is soft spoken she is very determined with her dream of becoming a doctor.
Shantakumar is also from Negeri Sembilian and is also 20 years old. Originally from an estate and from childhood has a dream of becoming a lawyer to fight for justice. He is from a poor family and his teachers advised him to study hard and this he did reaching Form 6. While waiting for his Form 6 results he worked in a sawmill.
Pavithra Ravesangar’s childhood passion and dream is to be a doctor but her dream were shattered when her dad passed away. She is from Kedah and is 20 years old. She did well at SPM scoring 9As and enrolled for STPM. She worked to pay her fees and currently works in a supermarket.
Because of Honda these nine young people together with 11 others will be able to realize their dreams. Receiving the needed funding is only an enabling factor. But each one of them will have to really work hard to fully realize their dream. But thanks to Honda that they are able to make a head way.
(Submitted on 26th April 2007) Source: YSS website