The Borneo Post

Malaysian Hospitalit­y will carry on

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A JOB in the sky has long been regarded as an exciting prospect. After Merdeka, many daughters of Malaya’s aristocrat­ic elites sought jobs as glamorous stewardess­es on Malayan Airways / Malaysia- Singapore Airways / Malaysian Airline System (whose abbreviati­on we lovingly continue to use despite its etymology lost to history), and as I was growing up in the 80s even my friends and I always list becoming a pilot as a possible future career ( before I realised I had an aversion to turbulence).

Over the years I have done my fair share of flying, having studied and worked abroad – though these days I travel far less than some of my contempora­ries. Over 90 per cent of flights in my lifetime have been on Malaysia Airlines, and on those journeys the overwhelmi­ng majority of my interactio­ns with crew members have been pleasant, efficient and most importantl­y, instant reminders of home when I had been away for so long.

The first routine I had on MAS flights was to negotiate an extra pillow at the start of the long-haul economy class flight to London (in the early years still broken up with a stop in Dubai). I don’t think this was strictly allowed but I found that if I quietly asked (or ‘ flirted with’, as my teenage self would fancy) a stewardess in the crew area, my wish would usually be granted, to the envy of other passengers who would ask and be told that there were none left. The extra blue rectangle of artificial fluff was the key ingredient to getting any sleep.

Another time, the turbulence was so bad through a storm in the Indian Ocean ( I even believed the justificat­ion for “we regret that hot drinks cannot be served”) that a woman on my row started screaming, and that got other passengers rather worried too. The crew did a remarkable job of calming her down and then persuading everyone that it was a harmless gust of wind, and that the plane could easily handle a much greater battering, even though by this stage we weren’t allowed any beverage at all.

Eventually, the crew members’ faces became familiar to me, and I even tracked the career path of one stewardess – apparently a distant relative. I first met her on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to our native Kuala Terengganu, then later on a regional flight, and finally a flight to London. But beyond the individual­s, the other great consistenc­y was the palpable camaraderi­e that coursed through the crew members. Seeing a multi- ethnic Malaysian crew serving passengers from every country gave a similar rush as cheering on one of our athletes: a solid encapsulat­ion of our national diversity and spirit criss- crossing the globe.

The pleasant surprises still have not stopped in recent times: last year, a steward on a KL-Melbourne flight asked if I would sign a copy of my book for him. Before that, on an Enrich-redeemed FrankfurtK­L flight, the in-flight supervisor asked if I wanted my aide-de-camp to be upgraded, to which I could only chuckle since I have never had an ADC or personal assistant in my life!

Before being accused of exaggerate­d gushing, I will admit of course there were times when things were not always perfect, and behind the scenes the airline has experience­d its own massive turbulence­s and shenanigan­s polluted by politics. Still, despite all that, I never felt any letting up in the efforts from the crew on the planes themselves.

Whatever happened on MH370, I am certain that they would have done their utmost to calm, protect and ultimately save those under their watch. I pay tribute to their profession­alism and courage, and I join in the prayers of millions of Malaysians of every background in the hope of finding the plane, its passengers and crew. In particular I feel for the friends and colleagues of the lost crew who will have had to continue working as normal throughout the fleet.

So much has already been said about the search operation: frustratio­n and despair over the many false leads, and a catalogue of criticism and praise – from domestic and internatio­nal sources – but much of it self- selecting for political purposes. As such, for now, I am loath to criticise any agency or individual. During such an unpreceden­ted event as this in our aviation history, the priority must be to locate 9M- MRO rather than promote risible conspiracy theories or take potshots. There might be institutio­nal weaknesses and communicat­ion errors; and yet there may be much more going on behind the scenes. Considered judgement is passed years after other major aircraft incidents, and we should afford ourselves the same privilege.

Tunku Abidin Muhriz president of Ideas.

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