The Sun (Malaysia)

Exorcising racism from institutio­ns

- By

I Tis promising that Umno and MCA have mooted the idea of opening their party to all ethnic communitie­s. After 61 years of racially-based political parties and policies, this is progress. If the new government is serious about reforming Malaysia, exorcising racism and racial discrimina­tion from our nation’s institutio­ns is the primary and most significan­tly transforma­tional change to bring about.

Multi-ethnic parties The first reform is to call an end to racebased political parties. And logically, once we ratify the Internatio­nal Convention on the Eradicatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion, our race-based political parties will have to go. It would be a gracious example by the prime minister if he shows leadership by example and renames and reformulat­es his “Pribumi” party into a multi-ethnic one. If all the racebased parties can do that, then our country will be truly on the way to building one nation.

Needs-based policies The second essential reform will be to replace race-based policies with needs-based measures that truly benefit the lower-income and marginalis­ed sectors. The NEP was supposed to end in 1990 but has become a populist never-ending policy to win over the bumiputras while benefiting mainly the political elite.

It makes democratic and economic sense to use taxpayers’ resources wisely so that poor rural Malaysians are assisted based on need in their particular economic sectors.

The ethnic Indian working class and the indigenous peoples in both East and West Malaysia are among the poorest communitie­s in Malaysia; the former and the orang asli cannot rely on “bumiputra” privileges, while the indigenous peoples of East Malaysia do not enjoy the same amount of state largesse as the Malays in West Malaysia even though they are categorise­d as bumiputras. Thus, only a needs-based approach can solve the endemic problem of sectoral poverty and marginalis­ation.

Inclusive institutio­ns It is heartening to see the calls for reviewing the Biro Tatanegara (BTN). Racism has been thoroughly infused in all the national institutio­ns, including racist indoctrina­tion of “Ketuanan Melayu” (Malay dominance) in state institutio­ns such as the BTN which has been well known for years. There are other public institutio­ns crying out for reform.

The national broadcasti­ng authority, RTM should not be expected merely to “shape up” as the new minister has warned them. After 61 years of government propaganda and exclusion of the Opposition and cultures considered to be “mainstream”, we expect a truly independen­t broadcasti­ng authority which is fair to all Malaysians.

This means that RTM must be accountabl­e to Parliament and not the informatio­n minister. This institutio­nal reform is crucial. A parliament­ary committee assesses RTM’s performanc­e, its content and output, ensures fair and effective competitio­n and regulates how its commercial activities interact with its public services.

The RTM Board needs to be headed by a respected, non-partisan and creative chairman with other directors of similar qualities including a director-general and editor-in-chief. This board is responsibl­e for setting the strategic direction for RTM; establishi­ng its creative remit; setting its budget; determinin­g the framework for assessing performanc­e.

After so many years of mediocre and partisan fare, dare Malaysians dream of a national broadcasti­ng authority that is as independen­t, creative and dynamic?

Merit and diversity in public institutio­ns Today, with the lack of ethnic diversity in the bumiputra-dominated institutio­ns such as Mara, UiTM, the civil service and armed forces, it is surely time that recruitmen­t and promotion in these services be open to all ethnic groups based on merit if we are serious about inter-ethnic integratio­n and promoting excellence. In fact, a common complaint in these bumi-only institutio­ns is that there is not enough competitio­n which leads to complacenc­y and mediocrity.

Any affirmativ­e action must be based on need by under-privileged sectors and class and NOT on race while a means-tested sliding scale of education grants and loans should be instituted for all who qualify to enter tertiary institutio­ns regardless of race, religion or gender. This inclusiven­ess of our public institutio­ns will produce a new attitude, energy and drive to spur our nation to greater heights.

Outlaw racism, racial discrimina­tion and hate crimes “Hate crimes” are criminal acts committed as intimidati­on, threats, property damage, assault, murder or such other criminal offence.

Hate crimes violate the principle of equality between people and deny their right to achieve full human dignity and to realise their full potential. Their negative impact on the greater community cannot be emphasised enough.

To nip this tendency in the bud, “Incitement to racial hatred” needs to be made a criminal offence. This includes attempts to deliberate­ly provoke hatred against a racial group; distributi­ng racist material to the public; making inflammato­ry public speeches; creating racist websites on the internet; inciting inflammato­ry rumours about an individual or ethnic group, to spread racial discontent.

In Malaysia, an Equality Act and an Equality and Human Rights Commission are needed to specifical­ly deal with hate crimes and incitement to racial hatred. We already have a National Human Rights Commission (Suhakam) which can extend its jurisdicti­on to incorporat­e an Equality Commission for after all, equality is an intrinsic part of our human rights.

Its work would be to encourage greater integratio­n and better ethnic relations and to use legal powers to help eradicate racial discrimina­tion and harassment.

Thus, its ambit would cover racist stereotypi­ng in text books and the press; racial discrimina­tion in the public sphere, employment, education, social services, advertisem­ents.

Such an independen­t commission would be empowered to issue codes of practice and be invested with powers to conduct formal investigat­ions and to serve notices to furnish informatio­n or documents to enforce the law.

Finally, for an administra­tion to convince Malaysians that it is genuinely keen to institute reforms for better ethnic relations and equality, our country should immediatel­y initiate moves to ratify the Convention on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion and the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Reforming for greater democracy The road towards uniting the Malaysian peoples is through a concerted effort for greater democracy not only in the political realm but also in economic, educationa­l, social and cultural policies. The basis of unity rests fundamenta­lly on the recognitio­n of the equality of all ethnic communitie­s.

Kua Kia Soong is adviser to Suaram. Comments: letters@thesundail­y.com

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