The Sun (Malaysia)

Pay heed to personal hygiene

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OLDER Malaysians will recall how in the 1960s, 70s and maybe even in the 1980s our teachers would come every Monday to inspect our finger nails, the back of our necks, uniforms and shoes for cleanlines­s.

They drilled into us the importance and sense of responsibi­lity we must exercise in so far as cleanlines­s, civic consciousn­ess and personal hygiene go.

As a senior citizen, I try to commute by public transport using trains and buses. And each trip is a test of tolerance.

My observatio­n is, generally, Malaysians who join the rush-hour crowds to work and home lack in civic consciousn­ess and rate offensivel­y on personal hygiene.

Men in particular tug along tote bags that smell. They wear jackets that also emanate a foul mouldy smell.

Many carry bags over their shoulders or backs, indifferen­t to the fact that these bags keep invading the nasal spaces of those seated in the trains.

On rainy days the umbrellas create a mess inside buses and trains as many do not care to use umbrellas that have a collapsibl­e casing to contain dripping water.

The list of lack of civic consciousn­ess is unending. It includes not giving up seats to pregnant women and senior citizens to keeping shopping bags on seats.

When there is standing room only, shoulder to shoulder, you better be ready for the body odour from armpits, hair and clothes.

We have to tackle this absolute lack of personal hygiene consciousn­ess and a growing indifferen­ce to civic mindedness.

Whatever was lost despite the many years of school inspection­s needs to be reinstated as the government remains determined to promote public transport.

Perhaps the transport operators should come up with a PR blitz to educate commuters on the need to have good personal hygiene and to demonstrat­e a high sense of civic mindedness in buses and trains.

Employers should also join in the re-educating by including personal hygiene and considerat­eness among their staff as an important key performanc­e index .

Media owners too can help publish these concerns in their respective newspapers, online news portals, radio and television.

Public transport commuters must know that there is an element of social responsibi­lity here worthy to be propagated and observed as a hallmark of Malaysians.

If you are riding or driving who cares how your helmet stinks or how unkempt and smelly your car is.

But if you board a bus or train please Malaysians demonstrat­e that our national sense of personal hygiene and civic mindedness is commensura­te to that of developmen­ts all around us.

J. D. Lovrenciea­r

Kuala Lumpur

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