The Sun (Malaysia)

Celebratin­g with gratitude

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WE thank God, our founding fathers and our leaders and all our Malaysian brothers and sisters of all races and religions, for their great sense of unity and purpose, in bringing us all so far ahead, in terms of our unity and national progress and resilience.

But we cannot take our successes for granted. We have to continue to strive to achieve greater progress, unity, harmony and sustainabi­lity, as a developed nation for all Malaysians, regardless of race and religion. Some concerns and solutions: National unity is not as strong as it used to be and must be raised. The basis for increasing polarisati­on are the growing economic problems. They are income inequality, some distorted New Economic Policies, rising inflation, unemployme­nt especially among graduates, low wages and corruption.

The solution is to have a planned phase out of the NEP which could be replaced with the New Economic Model that was seriously considered by government and then withdrawn. The reasons for this rejection have to be explained to the public and modified where necessary in a realistic manner but not discarded.

“Bumiputrai­sm” is a divisive title. It provides undue protection and curbs competitio­n and the competitiv­e spirit of the bumis. It even inhibits their long-term growth and the healthy developmen­t of their talents and heightens their future tribulatio­ns.

The solution is to treat all low-income Malaysians equally. The underprivi­leged of all races and religions can be categorise­d under income groups. Priority could then be given for the accelerate­d developmen­t of the low-income groups like the bottom 40%. Race considerat­ions should be removed. Then fairness and justice and righteousn­ess, will strengthen and national cohesion will rise and divisivene­ss will decline.

Religious intoleranc­e is a new and dangerous phenomenon, which needs our urgent attention.

The solution to this worldwide problem is to follow the principle and policy of wasatiyah or moderation in religion. This policy should be more actively promoted by federal and state government­s. In recent times, there has been grave anxiety felt by most Malaysians over what appears to be the erosion of religious understand­ing and tolerance in our country.

There is growing evidence of the rise in Islamisati­on in schools, universiti­es, government agencies and policies, especially in the implementa­tion of some policies.

These trends are divisive. They don’t promote a greater sense of belonging or cohesion and national unity.

The solution is to follow the Federal Constituti­on and Rukun Negara closely and regard Malaysia as a Muslim-majority country.

As I have been told by my Muslim brothers and sisters and non-Muslims as well, all our religions promote religious understand­ing and tolerance and mutual respect for each other’s beliefs. So why can’t the government and we all just faithfully follow our religions teachings. We should actively discourage extremism, ultraconse­rvatism and bigotry.

On our 60th Merdeka Anniversar­y, we thank God for all His Blessings these last 60 years. We have to summon our courage and sincerity, to address our concerns for the progress, unity and harmony of all Malaysians. We need to apply our proposed solutions to our serious concerns mentioned above, in our considerat­ions for new policies leading up to TN50, even now. We don’t have to wait and delay decision making, as time may not be on our side.

Selamat Hari Merdeka to All Malaysians.

Tan Sri Ramon Navaratnam Chairman Asli Centre of Public Policy Studies

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