The Sun (Malaysia)

Let civil servants take the lead

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EACH time during festivitie­s like Hari Raya the unity theme gets a boost. Especially so under the guise of socalled “open houses” where the full house is touted as a sign of unity. However at the TN50 dialogue with civil servants on May 31 when the concept of single-stream schools to strengthen unity was raised, it was described as sensitive and akin to a “political landmine”.

The proposal came from committed profession­als who are familiar with the situation on the ground. Their concern was well-articulate­d given the diversity of experience across multisecto­rs over a long period lending much credence to the suggestion. This is to be expected the moment the civil servants are truly empowered with trust and credibilit­y to voice their deeper societal concern. It is no longer the archaic “saya yang menurut perintah” especially when the “perintah” is meant to promote or cover up some dubious decision.

Like all patriotic citizens they too felt compelled to protect the dignity of the country, and not so for any one or group of individual­s who are known to abuse the system.

As a matter of respect, such aspiration­s must be taken up seriously and not filtered out prematurel­y or evaded for whatever reason including “political landmines”. Otherwise it defeats the very purpose of “listening to the people” and that the government still knows best, despite its claim that it is long over.

On the contrary, by returning the rightful role to the civil servants to take the lead in profession­ally solving major national issues, it will bring back the shine that was once our pride and joy. Then they acted as profession­al “advisers” to the politician­s at all levels and were highly regarded for that. Their profession­al integrity was unquestion­able, elevated well above the corruptibl­e gutter politics that is fast becoming mainstream today.

Simply said, the current situation is a stark contradict­ion and in need of urgent rehabilita­tion. Thus it is not surprising to learn that many yearn to go back to how it used to be. And the golden opportunit­y is here and now with TN50 provided it is not just a talk shop for political expediency. Regretfull­y this is the general impression so far with comments like “political landmines” weighing in on the sceptics who believe nothing “transforma­tive” is likely to happen if the politician­s fear that they have much to lose. More so when the civil servants succeeded to deliver just that.

To a thinking citizen, however, the option is crystal clear. For argument’s sake let us buy the “political landmines” reason. In the short run it is a potent “gimmick” to meet shortterm gains, while in the long run it is a social time bomb. It has been ticking long enough that a potential explosion is becoming more real each day. The civil servants know too well that if they do not defuse the “political landmines” soon, we will have to clean up an even messier social disaster in time to come. It is now eating up the social fabric at the very place where it should be strengthen­ed, that is, in all our schools and universiti­es. Instead it is hard to miss how things have deteriorat­ed reflective of the convoluted partisan and racial politics, even when it comes to parliament­ary debates.

To discerning profession­als the writing on the wall is plain to see. The longer it is left to myopic political zero-sum thinking, the worse the situation will become. Likened to a malignant social cancer it has to be removed promptly before even the host is sacrificed because the social downside is becoming more real to many more people than ever before. In other words, by not dismantlin­g the “political landmines” argument, the social time bomb version will easily manifest into reality.

Likewise by remaining in denial like disowning the issue of widespread “bullying” – it is destroying our future by the minute.

Now that the civil servants have courageous­ly spoken of their concern publicly, they at once recognise that education is a vital game-changer to bring to life a truly unified multicultu­ral Malaysian society once again. Indeed Unesco has long accepted that “to live together” is one of the four pillars of learning in the 21st century which we have in no uncertain terms put on hold politicall­y for more than 60 years. And the situation has since worsened over the years not unexpected­ly. It cannot get any worse without triggering events sooner than expected.

It is therefore only logical to give civil servants the chance they truly deserve to demystify the “political landmines”. It is time to prove their point profession­ally without any political interferen­ce of any sort. Let us welcome 1Malaysia beyond just the tired sloganeeri­ng. More importantl­y let’s get real!

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 ?? ASHRAF SHAMSUL/ THESUN ?? Tapping our collective wisdom.
ASHRAF SHAMSUL/ THESUN Tapping our collective wisdom.
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