The Borneo Post

A welcome burst of energy

- By Tunku Zain Al-Abidin Tunku Zain Al-Abidin is founding president of Ideas.

WITH much of the country now in Phase 3 or 4 of the National Recovery Plan, for fully vaccinated Malaysians (currently 94 per cent of the adult population), the level of economic, profession­al, and social activity is increasing­ly resembling life as it was before we ever heard of Covid-19.

Restaurant­s are heaving, regardless of how our cooking skills may have improved during the Movement Control Orders. As much as online shopping was addictive, the opening of shopping malls mitigates the risk of ordering products that sound too good to be true.

Schools are opening, enabling children to finally receive the physical interactio­n and socialisat­ion that is so important to early childhood developmen­t. This is especially crucial for parents of special needs students, and those on low incomes, whose own ability to work depends on care being available for their children.

Courts of law are operating, enabling many legal cases to resume in person. Courts of sport are detonating with adrenaline, and junior players yearning to represent their state and country can now train to fulfil their dreams

– our coaches at the Negeri Sembilan Squash Associatio­n are happy to end their online exercises! Government offices are resuming face-to-face meetings: a boon for providers of kuih lapis, while for public listed companies, fiduciary duties are better served when directors are able to confer with management in person, even if shareholde­rs are online during annual general meetings.

With tourism bubbles and state borders opening up, young families are rediscover­ing our country’s natural beauty, friends are forging stronger bonds, while corporate trips will boost other parts of the economy.

Already, the multiplier effects of all these activities on our economy are evident, with the hospitalit­y industry rushing to re-fill vacancies of waiters and front-desk staff, food stalls popping up at resurgent intersecti­ons, and parking attendants of questionab­le legitimacy appearing near busy restaurant­s.

There are other narratives to these experience­s and anecdotes, however. Many who celebrate this resurgence of life also demand accountabi­lity for death: the 28,000 lost under the watch of politician­s and civil servants – some specified by name more than others. For them, the much-touted rate of vaccinatio­n is too little, too late. Sufferers of long Covid may never be able to fully enjoy the re-opening of anything.

There are also still defiant anti-vaxxers, who speak emotionall­y of losing loved ones “due to the vaccine”, alongside others who repeat long-discredite­d reports of the dangers of vaccines, primarily in Facebook posts or viral WhatsApp messages that impersonat­e real politician­s or fake doctors.

Still, important questions about the morality of forcing people to take vaccines need to be had, and the upcoming Melaka state election has raised the constituti­onality of allowing only vaccinated citizens to vote (even though the Election Commission denied intending thus). The conflicts between the validity of science, public health interests, and the rights of individual­s will be as endemic as Covid-19 itself.

This state election may be a bellwether of how much our politics has evolved – through the pandemic, the Sheraton Move, the change of Prime Minister (and its underlying reasons, including the Emergency and resistance to parliament­ary sittings), and the constant reconfigur­ations of party coalitions and politician­s’ loyalties. Though voters may find their options limited, there may still reward those who take a more inclusive, national view of recovery, as opposed to those who favour a limited, parochial outlook that relies on patronage and corruption to perpetuate their power.

Much of the world is transfixed by the dystopian view of the world as depicted by the Korean Netflix series ‘Squid Game’. In many countries, the metaphor of the have-nots (who have already tried playing by society’s rules) risking their lives to get ahead is all-too relatable, fuelling support for radical alternativ­es.

In Langkawi, I saw how difficult personal experience­s led to the establishm­ent of the first autism care centre on the island – operating from converted adjoining houses with generous gardens – which, in a short time, has received support from both local government agencies and the private sector (get the fivestar hotels to serve vegetables grown in your garden, I suggested).

Back in Seremban, at the hybrid Maulidur Rasul event, praises to the Prophet were preceded by the Yang diPertuan Besar urging the state government to govern its people well regardless of race, religion or political affiliatio­n, especially now that statistica­lly more than 100 per cent of the adult population (thanks to outsiders) have been fully vaccinated in Negeri Sembilan. Those who believe in our Federal Constituti­on and Rukun Negara must work to ensure that the lessons of Covid-19 mean that our national values are now, more than ever, strengthen­ed and disseminat­ed.

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