Posts Tagged ‘Politicians’

Interview with new MIC President Datuk Palanivel

December 10th, 2010
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From the Star. Interesting to note that he doesn’t plan to stay for long (3 terms – meaning less than 6 years?).

He has been a journalist, consumer activist, press secretary and is a politician. On Monday, Datuk G. Palanivel, 61, became the eighth MIC president, replacing Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, 74. But can he bring change and fill the vacuum left by Samy Vellu? He talks about his plans for the party, his boss and the Indian community.

Is this something that you have always wanted – to become MIC president one day?

Not initially. When I worked as a press secretary to Samy Vellu, I never thought I would become the president. In the earlier years, yes, when I was in primary and secondary school, I thought I could be a great leader. But when I joined him, he was like a giant to me. So, I never thought of replacing him.

His own man: Palanivel gesturing during the interview in Kuala Lumpur recently. The new MIC president is determined to be a leader in his own right. — AZMAN GHANI / The Star

I thought he would be there forever and I would retire with him or even before him. The fact that it is coming to me, I think it is all destiny… it is fated. If something is fated, you cannot run away from it.

I am well prepared. Samy Vellu has taught me how to handle the political ropes over the years. I have learnt a lot on how to handle a situation – how to position the army, how to attack, how to lie low, when to really advance. He has taught me many things. He is giving the party to me now, as he knows I can stand on my own feet.

Samy Vellu has been the MIC president for 31 years. How do you plan to fill his shoes?

I cannot fill his shoes. I have to walk on my own. His style is different – a domineering, powerful, committed, charismatic leader who speaks with candour. He attracts attention.

I am a humble, committed, quiet, low profile yet performing leader, which he appreciates. He knows I perform. He knows I can deliver and achieve targets. I cannot be a leader like Samy Vellu. I am my own man. Samy Vellu himself tells me: “you are different and I am different.” Our styles are different.

Can you shake off Samy Vellu’s shadow?

These are all irrelevant questions because Samy Vellu knows that I stand on my own. We disagree more than we agree.

Despite that, he thinks I am the most suitable guy. Mostly because of my years of experience, as a four-term MP, one-term treasurer-general, three terms vice-president, two terms deputy president and I have been divisional and state chairman.

Some have the impression that although Samy Vellu is out of the picture now, he will still call the shots.

I am not saying that I will call the shots because those are words that give a wrong perception. I will make the decisions. He has told me very clearly: “Just like me, you must have the power to make the decisions.”

I think he has given up being a president. He would not want to become a president again. He has got a different role now, a much higher role and position. There are some people who would be life-long leaders and he is one of them. He will not be just an armchair critic.

Some say you are just warming the seat for younger leaders, such as MIC vice-president Datuk M. Saravanan.

They will all come up. My job is to develop them. That is my ambition – to develop the next generation of leaders.

The notion is that you got the position of deputy president and now president because you are Samy Vellu’s man?

There is a lot of truth in it. I will not deny that. But it is always the combined support, and not one-man support that makes a person win. In the last party election, I had my own team and strategic thinkers. I told my team to go for 200 more votes and I got it. It was a crucial victory.

Some say you are not vocal enough.

I have always been vocal and expressive, even in CWC meetings, but I am not confrontational. My party leaders know me. I may not allow myself to be known to everyone. I have always concentrated on the bottom 50%.

I have not concentrated on the top 20%. Being with them, lobbying them, socialising with them, sitting in their houses – I did not do that. I am always with the people. Maybe that was my weakness – that I neglected all these top guys.

Would you be a ‘my way or no way’ leader?

I will be an inclusive leader but a president has the right to make decisions.

In our party, the CWC is the most powerful body so I will listen, be guided by them and make the decisions I think I should make.

I will empower the working committee. Samy Vellu also listened to the CWC. I would not say that for Samy Vellu, it was his way or no way. He was a good leader. You cannot dispute that.

I want to build the party around the people. I want to listen to people, empower them and help them improve. And at the same time strengthen past initiatives and where necessary introduce new ones.

What are your plans for the party as the new president?

We want to go down to the people. We want to try as much as possible to relate ourselves to the people. We must go back to the people. That will be the party’s slogan.

My main idea is to develop this party into a strong formidable force and mobilise the Indian votes. I do not have a personal, selfish or greedy agenda.

What are your plans to help the Indian community be it education, welfare, etc?

Empowerment. I will introduce programmes that build capacity. My job is not to build the organisation around myself but to build it around people.

I want to create hundreds of powerful leaders on the ground and build leadership and service-oriented people on the ground.

We are a minority community which needs the government’s help. We want the community to move forward, to be empowered and to be in the mainstream of development. The government must take care of us. Take care of us and the Indian votes will come back. Neglect us and the votes will run away.

Indians should be given a good quality of life; many are struggling.

If the government can look into our plight and solve all these problems, then these votes will come back.

Deprivation leads to violence. We have to work hard but the government must work harder.

Would you bring back former vice-president Datuk S. Sothinathan and former deputy president Datuk S. Subramaniam into the leadership fold?

They are all in the party. They have to contest for the posts. I cannot pick or drop people. My idea is to democratise the party more.. I will not dictate.

If Datuk Subramaniam wants to make a comeback he is welcome. It is a democracy.

It has been said that the MIC leadership is based on caste. Is this true? How are you going to break this?

I will be a very inclusive leader. I come from a small group. Being a minor person in the caste structure, I can play a more neutral role, bringing together all different groups under one umbrella.

But these are not major issues. As a community we are all Indians. I would like to override the caste issue.

I will not perpetuate caste. I will look at merit, ability and performance.

It is the tradition for MIC president to be given a Minister’s post.

The long time desire of the Indian community is to have two Ministers (as in the 1970s). But I am not going to chase for it. I want to do a good job for my party.

MIC has faced problems in regaining support from the Indian community, many of whom see the party as irrelevant.

To say that the MIC is irrelevant is not totally right. That is the perception that people have created that we have become irrelevant.

If you look at our website, our activities, how we went round Selangor in the last two months for Deepavali and all that, we saw there is great revivalism.

Interest in the party has not died. Indians regard this party as a mother party. No race-based party will become irrelevant. Our relevance will depend on how well we are able to mobilise Indian support.

We did not distance ourselves. Over time, the political landscape has changed. Democracy has matured.

Our dominance has been broken just like Umno, MCA and other component parties.

How do you plan to convince splinter groups such as Hindraf and Makkal Sakthi to rejoin MIC?

My first important task is to strengthen our own support base. We have almost 4,000 branches.

My job is to politically educate my own members on party loyalty and discipline, mobilise Indian votes and liberalise and democratise the party so that more people will join. We have our own methods.

But there is a revivalism in Indian support, Indian votes and the MIC.

Passing the baton: Samy Vellu sharing a light moment with Palanivel at the party headquarters in Kuala Lumpur on Monday. — AFP

How would you convince young Indians who have lost faith in the party to give MIC a chance?

We have to deal with voters in the cyberworld and look at ways and means to deal with this group that is anonymous but will vote on Election Day. We have to be in touch with them

I do not think so the young have brushed us off. We are in the universities. We are in touch with them. I would not know which group has lost faith in us.

Indians are also attracted to the inclusive policies of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak. And they will give us another chance because of the policies of the present government.

We want to bring Indian votes back to Barisan.

They are coming back. We are happy with it. We want to increase it further and work in a focused way.

How long will you stay?

I am not going to go for three terms. I am 61 years now. I have a family. I have grandchildren whom I miss a lot. They are moving soon as my son is going to work in Australia. I want to do a good job, create the next generation of leaders, leave behind a strong party and mobilise the Indian votes. And then I will go.

I am a contented person. I am happy, satisfied, not overambitious, overselfish or greedy, chasing for power and not wanting to let go; I do not belong to that category.

You have been a journalist, consumer activist and politician. Which best describes you?

Activist. I have been an activist since my Consumear Association of Penang days. I am an outspoken and humble leader who distances himself from the rich and famous.

I am strong like the rock of Gibraltar. I won the deputy president’s post in the last party election without holding a government post.

I am a very motivated person. I have a lot of drive, enthusiasm, commitment, sincerity to push through programmes and to deliver. I am a hands-on type of a person.

I listen to people. I do not overreact or get angry. Of course, I carry a lot of things in my heart. I can take it in one ear and let it out through the other ear. I will not overreact.

Interview with Samy Vellu

November 30th, 2010
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This is one of the last interviews for Samy Vellu since he’s stepping down next week.  He was also interview on MinnalFM on Sunday evening (I heard it on the trip back from Seremban). Let’s see what he’s got to say. I’m compiling a list of his accomplishments as a MIC leader and Indian community representative at national level, so do drop me a note if anything comes to your mind (we are talking about success stories on a national level, not stories like “helping Muthu to get place in university”). So far there’s establishment of AIMST, TAFE and MIED.

Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu will step down as MIC’s longest serving president next week but he is not about to ride into the sunset. The flamboyant politician will assume a post as Malaysia’s special envoy for infrastructure to South Asian countries.

IT is days before Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu bids farewell as MIC president after holding the post for an unprecedented 31 years. But those close to the party supremo says he has hardly been showing any signs of slowing down.

His zest was evident on Friday when he checked in early at the MIC headquarters in Jalan Rahmat as the special guest at a gathering organised by Wanita MIC for budding women entrepreneurs.

And there he was on stage, the remarkable orator still drumming across pointers in his eloquent Tamil.

Samy: ‘I gave a boost to the Public Works Department to work harder’.

“You must not only be brave but also have the gumption to succeed. And always be wise; do not trade on credit terms,” the 74-year-old party chief, who used to hand-roll tobacco leaves to make cerut (Indian cigars) at an early age to ease his family’s financial burden, says in what seems to be his parting advice to the group of businesswomen.

Except for signs of appearing weary from the long hours he has been keeping of late, Samy Vellu is his usual suave self in his dark blue designer suit and tie.

“All my life, the interest of the community has been paramount to me. I have faithfully executed my duties with that in my mind,” he tells Sunday Star in a farewell interview at the MIC headquarters on Friday.

It will be a rare moment for the MIC when the eldest son of a lorry driver born in the Rengo Malay Estate in Kluang, Johor, calls it a day on Dec 6.

Samy Vellu is the longest serving president of the party, having assumed the post in an acting capacity in 1979 following the sudden death of Tan Sri V. Manickavasagam. He has retained the presidency for a record 11 terms.

Love him or hate him, the flamboyant former Works Minister has undeniably been a president who tried doing things differently. His career was only sullied by the Maika Holdings controversy and his stunning defeat in the 2008 general election for the Sungai Siput parliamentary constituency, which he had held since 1974.

»I don’t think there will be any infighting« DATUK SERI S. SAMY VELLU

But Samy Vellu prefers to present the big picture of his presidency. “We did not only work as a political party but became a provider as well – providing education; giving out loans; building higher institutions of learning; all these with the aim of seeing the community benefiting at every turn,” he says, widening his eyes to get his meaning across.

In a wide-ranging interview, Samy Vellu talks about his long MIC stewardship, his confidence in his successor Datuk G. Palanivel, the future direction of the party, his stint in the Cabinet, the Maika Holdings’ flop, his greatest disappointment and the diplomat that he intends to be.

Q: You said during my last interview with you in April 2009 that you would step down as president “in a year-and-a-half at the most”. You’ve kept your word. Is this a planned move?

A: I had already planned it when I contested in the last general election – that I should get out within one to one-and-a-half years and not wait three years – so that, within the next one-and-a-half years, we can decide on the new leaders. The next leader has already been decided with (Datuk G.) Palanivel winning the deputy president’s post in the last party election.

> Can you state when you are formally stepping down? Will it be after chairing your final CWC meeting on Dec 6, or Dec 13, a day after your biography is launched by the Prime Minister?

It will be somewhere in the first week of December… Dec 6.

> Are you being made ambassador with ministerial rank to South Asia, mainly focusing on India, and also to Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and the Maldives?

Yes, that’s right. Malaysia has been growing very fast in the construction industry. We have proven our capability in countries like India and other countries. That is why, in the past, the Indian Government awarded us contracts worth about US$20bil (RM66bil). And Malaysian contractors have proven their worth. But now, things have slowed down a bit. The Indian Government is going to spend US$1.5tril (RM4.95tril) in infrastructure development over the next five years.

Our PM feels this is the time we should fully equip ourselves and get all our contractors lined up. We have to conduct capacity-building to ensure that those who have the capacity are allowed to vie for projects in India and other countries.

> You had a meeting with the Indian Prime Minister during his recent visit to Kuala Lumpur so you must have briefed him on your new role. What was the feedback?

I explained to Dr Manmohan Singh that Datuk Seri Najib has agreed to give me an opportunity to serve as special envoy to India on infrastructure. I told him that I will be moving into India to do infrastructure- related work with companies which have got the best capabilities and capacity and that we will also participate in their tender system.

Even before all this, I went to India on my own. I brought PLUS (Expressways Bhd) and got them to work with Nagarjuna Construction Co in India on a 260km highway project. The pre-qualification has been done and the tender process will follow. They are working on it.

We are also working on several other projects (in India). We want to take UEM (Group Bhd) again to India to participate in jobs. UEM is going to put up a partnership with Punj Lloyd (Group of India) and compete for jobs.

I have also introduced Hopetech (Sdn Bhd) to do collaboration on introducing a centralised toll collection system in India.

Presently, different companies are collecting toll on their own. We want to set up a centralised toll collection system so that nobody loses money buying and putting up equipment all the time. Hopetech and Punj Lloyd will be signing an MoU very soon on this. It’s going to be very interesting.

> Will your role be confined to these South Asian countries?

The other countries, when they invite me, I will seek special permission from the Prime Minister to go. I may have to go to Saudi Arabia and Djibouti. These are the two other countries we are thinking of now, because they are very keen on Malaysia building their road networks.

Djibouti wants to build roads and housing, while Saudi contractors want to have partnerships with Malaysian contractors to compete for jobs in Saudi. It is going to be very good for Malaysia. Our construction industry must continuously grow so that we can prove to the world that although we are a small country, we have a bigger capacity in the industry.

> From a veteran, rugged, hands-on, tough-talking politician and head of the MIC to a roving ambassador. At 74, do you feel like being a new man?

My style of work will change. I will be more aggressive working towards achieving the objectives of the national construction industry so that we will be accepted as world class contractors elsewhere. That is what I have in mind. There will be a new vocabulary as well.

> On your record term as MIC president, what would you list as your greatest achievements?

Number one, I have earned the respect of the community which I consider paramount in order to be a leader of the community. Number two, I have always thought of the community; they have been above everything else to me.

Number three, I feel that we have dedicated the MIC to the cause of the community during my 30 over years (as president). That is why we did not only work as a political party but we became a provider as well – providing education, giving out loans, building higher institutions of learning – all these with the aim of seeing the community benefiting at every turn.

> When we talked last year, you said you would only leave after ensuring that all was well in the party. Are you sure that this is the time?

It is all right now. But I will have to do some adjustments because when new people come, they have to adjust themselves to other elements within the party. They have to work together. I have told them that we have a long way to go and have to protect the community by working together. I have informed these leaders that if we are divided, we will not benefit at all; that we will be spending more time fighting than serving the people.

> What about doubts on whether Palanivel can fill your formidable shoes and be his own leader? In your view, can he command the support of the grassroots?

For every leader, when they are about to take up a position, people will ask, “Can he do it?” It happened to me in 1979 when I took over. They said, “Oh, the MIC is gone.” Some even said a rowdy has taken over the leadership! But I made peace in the party. I made everyone understand that they have a responsibility and a role to play.

A person has to be given an opportunity to prove himself. I know that he (Palanivel) has got that capability.

>What do you expect of Palanivel as the incoming MIC chief?

I want him to continue what we have done, continue to look at the community’s growth both economically and socially, and at the same time be vocal for the cause. I think he can do it.

> Will Palanivel be the acting president? I am raising this because many in the party are unclear about what his actual status will be.

No, he will be a full-fledged president. The MIC constitution states that in the absence of the president, the deputy will act for the president. Absence means I go on leave; I am away but that I will still come back. Here, I am resigning so he will take over as full president.

In 1979, I took over as acting president because at that time there were no vice-presidents to be made deputy president. That scenario was diffe rent. We amended the party consti tution after that to have three vice-presidents.

> What about the deputy president’s post then?

The constitution states that the president may in consultation with the CWC appoint an acting deputy president from among the three vice-presidents. I have already got the mandate from the CWC. I will put them both (Palanivel and Dr Subramaniam) in their seats and then leave because I don’t want a tussle after that. Somebody may come and tell him (Palanivel) not to pick Dr Subramaniam as the No 2. There are a lot of nasty people who like to create problems.

> Is it not an awkward situation in the MIC, the president being a Deputy Minister while Dr Subramaniam sits in the Cabinet?

We cannot look at it as an awkward situation because it was due to the circumstances that we faced in 2008 (general election). It was due to the circumstances that made me decide that Dr Subramaniam would move up as minister at tha t time. Dr Subramaniam was the one who won very comfortably (in the Segamat parliamentary constituency).

On the other hand, (Datuk M.) Saravanan and (Datuk S.) Devamany also won, but I felt that Dr Subramaniam was more experienced and better qualified and that he would do a better job as a minister. And he is doing it.

> Do you think Palanivel and Dr Subramaniam will work together in the long term?

They should work together with one heart and one mind, and they will do a tremend ous job. I don’t think there will be any infighting.

> Back in the old days when the Cabinet was made up of less than 20 ministers, the MIC held two Cabinet posts. Now with a much larger Cabinet, your party has only a sole ministership. Can you explain why you have not been able to do anything about it in your 31 years as MIC president?

Even recently, we have raised the matter with Datuk Seri Najib, asking him to promote Palanivel to full minister. Datuk Seri Najib is a very reasonable man and he understands the importance of the Indian community’s contributions. We have talked to him.

Before the Hulu Selangor by-election, when we wanted to put Palanivel as the candidate, we discussed so many things with the PM. He might j ust do it. I think what we couldn’t achieve over the last 30 years, we can achieve under Datuk Seri Najib.

> There are ex-MIC members scattered all over – in the PPP, IPF, PKR, DAP and now in Datuk Nallakaruppan’s Malaysian Indian United Party (MIUP). Many of them were either disillusioned or sacked by the MIC. What do you say about this?

I have already told Nallakaruppan that he can come back together with his total membership. We are now working in Kedah to woo back all those who went to PKR. About 1,000 are willi ng to return and form new branches. This is a good thing.

Indians are beginning to realise that PKR is not the party for them because they have no respect there. They have been used only as henchmen to carry things around.

In the recent PKR elections, every Indian was defeated. What does that mean? Many might think that the PKR gave a lot of seats to Indian candidates (in the last general election). Yes, they did but it was because they couldn’t find anyone. And they also did not expect to win. But now they realise that they should not give in to the Indians. This is what is happening in PKR.

> On Maika Holdings, looking back, who should be accountable for its failure? And why did it fail?

I can tell you that when everybody was going down, we started Maika Holdings. We started at a very bad time. We were trying to do business. We made money and lost, made money and lost again. We didn’t have people with a real business sense to run (Maika) in the past.

But on the other hand, whatever they did, they did not make Maika lose its worth. Maika’s worth wa s still there. At least we sold off the shares and gave the people back their money. A person who invested RM100 got back the RM100, although the share was worth 80 sen because we gave out free bonus shares. Including the bonus shares, they got back their RM1.

> What do you have to say to the thousands of poor Indians who invested their life-sa vings in Maika?

We paid back to them. In total, they all got about RM40mil in repayments, bonuses and all. They got back quite a lot from Maika.

> Maika shares are today in the pocket of a single Indian. The way you see it, was it a toss-up between thousands of Indians owning a loss-making entity or one man stepping in to rescue Maika?

If that one man (Tan Sri G. Gnanalingam) did not step in to rescue Maika, I think Maika would have gone bust. Nobody would have got anything. It is a good thing that he stepped in to save us.

> On education: One of your grandest projects was the AIMST University in Kedah. But why are many of our Indian students still heading to Russia, India, Poland and Indonesia to study medicine?

Because we only have 200 places for medicine (annually) but there are between 2,000 and 3,000 students getting out of school every year who want to become doctors. So there is no other way; they have to go to Russia, Indonesia and other countries.

> It’s not because your fees are very high due to the massive cost of con structing AIMST?

It’s got nothing to do with the construction cost. Ours is the lowest fee. Those days, we charged RM180,000.

Then everyone raised it to between RM275,000 and RM300,000 but we hiked our fees to RM260,000 only. You know, we have to pay professors a lot of money. Their salaries amo unt to quite a lot.

> What were your major achievements as Works Minister, and Energy, Telecommuni cations and Post Minister?

The most interesting things (I’ve done) are the North-South Expressway, the Penang Bridge and also several privatised highways. And I gave a boost to the Public Works Department ( JKR) to work harder. When I left the ministry, that was the year it became the best ministry in terms of implementation.

When I was Energy, Telecom muni – cations and Post Minister, I issued five cellular phone licences, anticipating the demand for cellular phones in the country.

And it was me who discussed with Ananda Krishnan and others on the launching of a satellite. I am the one who planned that Malaysia should have a satellite.

I announced that Malaysia would launch a satellite at a meeting that both Dr Mahathir and I attended. There were foreigners who were surprised with my announcement.

> Who were the people you considered to be your mentors?

Tun Sambanthan, Tan Sri V. Manickavasagam, and a leader that I really loved, Datuk Harun (Idris). He gave us the energy to really work back then. In the past, I was more connected with Umno than the MIC. And then, of course, in the later part when I came into the Government, I liked Dr Mahathir very much – for his dynamism, hard work and love for the country.

>You’ve made many a friend and foe while spearheading the MIC. You famously made peace with one-time arch rival M.G. Pandithan before he passed away. Any more such gestures before you step down?

The only person in my life that I could not befriend was Datuk Subramaniam. He has his own mind. After the 2008 general election, he asked his Tamil newspaper to destroy me. They were out to prove that I had done nothing for the Indian communi ty and for the country.

>How do you compare yourself against Tun Sambanthan and Tan Sri Manickavasagam? How will the MIC be without S. Samy Vellu?

Sambanthan was a great leader. Manickavasagam was the president for a short period. He built the MIC headquarters where we are sitting today. And he brought improvement in the management of MIC. But my style is different from his. The MIC, without Samy Vellu, will still go on. This is the world.

SPM History to be compulsory pass subject in 2013

October 24th, 2010
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I can’t believe the **** we have to tolerate. A decision like this, deciding that History is to be a compulsory pass subject for SPM in 2013 is announced (or decided?) at a political party gathering? Where’s the input from the academicians, the public, the teachers?

I really hope there was some study done on this, and the announcement is just another gaffe by the minister. I don’t think making a subject pass-compulsory will make students actually learn and understand it.

HISTORY will be made a must-pass subject in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia(SPM) beginning 2013, said Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin.

Muhyiddin said that beginning 2014, History would be made a core subject in primary schools, too.

He said putting more emphasis on history would create a deeper appreciation of the concept of “negara bangsa”.

“In view of this, the content of the subject would be improved with more emphasis on understanding the Federal Constitution.

“Beginning 2013, History, like Bahasa Malaysia will be a must-pass subject to obtain the SPM certificate,” the Umno deputy president said in his winding-up speech.

The call to place more importance on the subject was raised by several delegates including delegates from Perak and Kedah.

They argued that the younger generation was oblivious to the history of the nation especially the Federal Constitution. The delegates also felt that primary school pupils should be exposed to history in a more comprehensive manner.

Muhyiddin, who is also the Educa tion Minister, said presently elements of history was included in the “Kajian Tempatan” subject which is a combination of history and geography.

“Under the new Kurikulum Standard Sekolah Rendah (KSSR), history will be a core subject starting from 2014,” he said.

Muhyiddin said the KSSR, which would be introduced next year, emphasised hands-on and project-based learning as well as discovery and enquiry.

“The objective of KSSR is to produce holistic students who are capable of facing future challenges.

“It is also in line with the decision to introduce a new assessment system for the Ujian Pelajaran Sekolah Rendah in 2016,” he said.

Muhyiddin also said the new school-based assessment to replace thePenilaian Menengah Rendah (PMR) would be introduced in 2014, two years ahead of its initial implementation date.

Deputy Education Minister Datuk Dr Mohd Puad Zarkashi described the changes to the subject as timely as remarks on racial sensitivities were being made without understanding our real history.

“It is important to create awareness among the rakyat of our history and it should be introduced as early as Year Two,’’ he said.

Increase in Chinese and Indians hired in civil service?

October 14th, 2010
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This is the statement made by Deputy Minister Murugiah. It seems the percentage increased since from 2008, but at a meager 9% for the Chinese and 4% for the Indians. This means 58.3% of 1,559 Chinese and 42.7% of 1833 Indians have been hired in 2010 (up to June 15).

Is an increase of 9% or 4% over two years something to be proud of? At this rate, when can the civil service be on a more balanced ratio?

But wait, the statistics for 2008 was 49.2% out of 4,648 Chinese and 38.8 per cent of the 6,106 Indian candidates interviewed were hired.

Now, can anyone who is expert in Maths tell me which is bigger:

58.3% of 1,559 or 49.2% of 4,648?

42.7% of 1,833 or 38.8% of 6,106?

I believe elementary division is taught in primary school.

I wonder whose head is going to roll for making the Deputy Minister seem so [fill in the blanks].

Putrajaya moved to quell criticisms today that the civil service was dominated by one race, claiming there was an increase in non-Bumiputera government servants since 2008.

Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Senator Datuk T. Murugiah told a press conference in Parliament today that it was not true that the government only focussed on hiring Bumiputeras into the civil service.

“People always criticise us for hiring only those from one race to work in the service but it is not true. The percentage of non-Bumiputeras hired by the Public Service Commission has increased in the past few years,” he said.

Murugiah explained that 58.2 per cent of the 1,559 Chinese job applicants interviewed for posts in the service were hired by the commission as of June 15 this year.

The number of Chinese employed to date, he added, had seen an increase of nine per cent as compared to 2008.

“There were only 49.2 per cent of Chinese applicants chosen out of the 4,648 who applied. If there are many applicants from one particular race, we will look at the number of applications, their qualifications and their presentations during their interviews.

“We have many applicants but they may not make the screening process due to their qualifications… they have to comply to the set of rules and regulations,” he said.

He added that the applicants were shortlisted by a computer, which wa programmed to filter through applicants according to their qualifications.

“There is no bias there. All races are given opportunity for top management positions. There is no quota system,” he stressed.

Murugiah added that for the Indian applicants, the commission had hired 42.7 per cent of the 1,833 who were interviewed this year.

This, he said, was higher than in 2008 when only 38.8 per cent of the 6,106 interviewed were hired.

But, wait till you read this statement from Minister Koh Tsu Koon which seems to indicate another set of figures (article on 27 August 2010):

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon said the Public Services Commission (PSC) received 25,789 applications from the Chinese last year compared with 12,872 in 2007.

Koh said the appointments offered by PSC to the Chinese during that period also rose by almost 100 per cent — 2,600 appointed as civil servants last year compared with 1,323 in 2007.

He said statistics as at June this year showed that Malaysia had 1.29 million civil servants, with Malays making up 77 per cent, followed by Sabah and Sarawak Bumiputeras at 8.7 per cent, Chinese (six per cent), Indians (four per cent) and others (4.3 per cent).

Let’s take an average  increase of 2,600 Chinese staff in year, and if you want to increase the 6 percent representation to 20%, how long would it take? Assuming number of civil servants will be 1.3 million.  That would be increase from 77,400 to 260,000 which is 182,600 new staff.  Assuming an unrealistic assumption of no Chinese staff retiring or perishing while in service, it would take another 70 years to reach the target.

Let’s take Murugiah’s figure from 2008 that about 2300 Indians are hired. Same scenario: assume the civil servants are to remain at 1.3 million, no Indian staff retiring or perishing in duty, and we want to increase the 4% (51,600 out of 1.29 million) to 10% (130,000 out of 1.3 million). That’s an increase of 78,400 and would take 34 years to reach.

Obviously, its nearly impossible to have the target ratios within this century. You can’t create new posts since the civil service is too big for the population, and you can’t remove current staff from the high percentage group and give the place to the lower percentage groups. Some sort of “affirmative action” for the minority groups can be proposed, but it won’t be acceptable to some quarters.

Samy Vellu stepping down in January 2011

September 30th, 2010
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Finally, the date is set for Samy:

MIC President Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said Thursday he was stepping down to make way for his deputy Datuk G. Palanivel in January.

“Today, I’m officially announcing my decision to step down and pass the leadership to my deputy in January next year,” he told reporters after chairing the party’s Central Working Committee here.

He said that he had announced his decision to the CWC earlier.

Samy is the party’ longest serving president, holding the position since 1979 for 11 consecutive terms.

He was the Works Minister of Malaysia and the longest serving minister in the Cabinet until he lost his parliamentary seat in the 2008 general elections.