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Saturday, September 4, 2010

‘Namewee Is A Uniting Factor’


Mariam Mokhtar
Malaysian Mirror
Friday, 03 September 2010

If Namewee (Wee Meng Chee) is prosecuted for his music-video, then two mixed messages are being sent out by the government: The first is that the authorities practise double-standards. The second is that it was only because of Namewee’s ‘intervention’ that the government sat up and took racism seriously.

On Wednesday, it was reported that the rapper was being investigated by the police for sedition. Various ministers and a menteri besar also want Namewee punished for his controversial video.

In the first place, Namewee made this clip because of the government’s slow response to tackle effectively the latest racist incident. It appears that we are now united, against racism.

Far from being seditious or racist, Namewee has done the job of the government in exposing all that is ‘ugly’ about us.

Just over two weeks ago, the Johore school headmistress featured in Namewee’s clip made serious, humiliating and crude remarks to non-Malay students in her school.

The prime minister, who coined the term 1Malaysia, took two weeks to make any comment regarding this issue. In the meantime, the damage became magnified.
Finally, Najib said that when it came to racism, he wanted ‘zero-tolerance’ and a ‘swift response’ to people who made racial slurs.

It appears that the prime minister has fallen at the first hurdle. There was not a quick, speedy response, as promised. It took him a very slow two weeks before issuing a statement.

For another, why has the police investigation been allowed to drag?

But let us imagine that for one moment, it was a non-Malay school head who had uttered derogatory remarks about her Malay pupils and told them to ‘pergi balik bawah tempurung’ (return to your place beneath your coconut shell) or that the tudung worn by the girls was only to cover-up their ‘bad hair-do’.
Wisdom and tolerance

I need not mention how the Malay community, egged on by the Ketuanan Melayu clowns, would react by picketing, protesting and practically foaming at the mouth.

If anything, the Johore school incident proved that the non-Malay community has shown extreme restraint and should be commended for their wisdom and tolerance.

The shame is that few Malays voiced their objections to the disgusting remarks of the Malay school-heads (both in Johore and Kedah). Where are the voices of condemnation for these racist rants? Are they afraid of pilloried by members of their own community? Or have they no principles? And lack a conscience?

Namewee is reacting to the slow response of the government to tackle racism. Hence, it is the government who has failed the Malaysian public. It is Namewee who conveyed the important message to Malaysians, in an entertaining way via his Youtube clip, that ‘racism sucks’.

To date, what is the progress into the school-head investigation? How long does it take to get eye-witness statements?

People forget that Namewee is a rapper. He produces videos and music videos. Rap music may glorify violence, misogyny, drug abuse and homophobia. Profanity and vulgar language are common.

Like it or not, rap or hip hop, is the language of the young these days. With rap, he has managed to engage with the young, to ‘say ‘no’ to racism’. Any parent of a teenager will know what I am talking about. The songs teenagers listen to these days, often colour the air-waves blue.

One can only imagine Namewee’s rage at the slow official response to tackle racism.

It is the same fury that overcomes us when we are lectured by our political masters to do, think and talk ’1Malaysia’ but then discover to our shock, that some ministers do not practise it.

Admittedly, Namewee is simply expressing his anger and frustration in creativity and music, just like Eminem or Jay-Z.

It is highly unlikely that our aging ministers will understand nor appreciate rap music.

Namewee is the perfect entertainer and has sound business acumen. Sometimes, to shock may even sell more records. He has gained increased publicity for himself being enterprising.

Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin adopted a different spin on Namewee’s questions: “You tak baca? Siapa buat Malaysia kaya?” (Don’t you know? Who made Malaysia prosperous?). Khairy assumed that Namewee suggested the ‘Malays played a minor role in Malaysia’s economic growth’.

Khairy is possibly wrong and as far as can be ascertained, Namewee wasn’t alluding to anything.

Namewee posed an open-ended question. However, political personalities are already scoring brownie points by insinuating various things.

Namewee was wrong to be abusive – even I would balk short at such behaviour. But Namewee speaks for all those who suffered that day in school and for the people in Malaysia who care.

Maybe if the authorities had been swift in their response, Namewee would not have had the reason to come up with this clip.

The more potent danger

Actually, Namewee has done the job of the government much better that the government itself. It has given prominence to racism issues in a creative way and made us take a stand against racism. If not for his Youtube, clip, would we have taken as much attention? The problem is that the authorities have ‘lost it’.

When Dr Chua Soi Lek criticised Namewee and said, “Freedom of expression should come with responsibility to consider sensitivities towards other races and religions”, he forgot that it was the two school principals who ignored sensitivities and caused a furore.

And instead of the school principals being censured, it is Namewee who is allegedly being charged with sedition. Namewee’s clip was crude and coarse, but not racist.

This young disgruntled Malaysia’s response to racism has been blown into something of a racial firestorm. That is the more potent danger.

It seems that when you scratch beneath the surface, 1Malaysia is unraveling faster than a knitted jumper. One person condemns an irresponsible racist head, and the so called defenders of the race, react like beasts unleashed, and all for the wrong reasons.

Namewee has talent. He engages with the young via his rap music and lyrics. He should be nominated for a role in the Ministry for Information, Communications, Cul¬ture and Arts, to promote racial unity and other Malaysian issues.

Far from creating disharmony, Namewee has united us against racism. He at least has the courage to tackle racism in his own entertaining way.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Patriotism Revisited - Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad

by Dr. Dzul

I did not want to write anything on the 53rd Merdeka Day this year. For the more discerning section of the rakyat, the spate of events that preceded it spoke for itself. But with the 16th September Malaysia Day drawing close, it doesn’t benefit anyone to remain under self-imposed gag-order. This writer is back on his combative engaging mood as to share his 2-cent worth of his grey matter.

Despite all efforts of show-casing the Merdeka Celebration as a ‘burst of patriotism, a sight to behold and a moment to cherish’ by the BN-mainstream media, many wouldn’t disagree that it was a phenomenon that didn’t go beyond the confine of the walls of Stadium Putra in Bukit Jalil. Very sad indeed it was.

Its absence was even more visible nationwide and it doesn’t take much convincing to arrive to that conclusion either. But the fundamental question to address is why?

What has become of the patriotism of the entire citizenry you may like to ask?

Why are we no longer willing to voluntarily and spontaneously express and exhibit our love for our nation, support and defend its cause with devotion? Isn’t that the universal defining criterion of a patriot? Has it been become obsolete for now? No! Is it still valid? Yes! But why aren’t we capable of showing all this anymore? Why has it gone stale, if not entirely dead?

The answers to these million ringgit questions lie in the very line of the questions themselves. The state of voluntarism and spontaneity in expressing love and devotion for the nation has a lot to do with one’s conviction. One’s conviction in turn defines one’s attitude and invariably value-judgment. You couldn’t impose and compel perception, much less conviction on others. Compulsion is very much against the nature of love and devotion. Compulsion breeds hypocrisy, the anti-thesis of true love and a disease that betrays devotion.

Lest that the writer be misunderstood let it be made clear that he is not demanding that patriotism be revisited but more importantly contextualised. It is a timeless moral precept worthy of embodiment. What remains debatable and the bone of contention is how to express and exhibit patriotism specific to one’s political and historical context.

Historically, the challenge of achieving independence from the colonial British had rallied and galvanised the nation from all walks of life and ideological persuasions. Despite their diversity the founding fathers and their generation strived and heavily sacrificed their all to attain independence in their respective ways. It was perhaps patriotism at its best.

Five decades later, the symbolism has been reduced to flag-waving of the Jalur-Gemilang and episodically parading of our youths and uniformed security forces demonstrating discipline and resolve to defend the country. Quite evidently, this symbolism of post-colonial era could no longer withhold the nation together much to disgust of our leaders. Needless to say, Patriotism is surely more than flag-flying at places of business, in house compounds and on motor vehicles.

The nation is now in a severe state of despondency, and embattled with unending crisis, it is in dire need of rejuvenating its concept and embodiment of patriotism. Not only has it to grapple with the ever challenging global economy and its uncertainties, the systemic rot as a result of subversion of all critical institutions exacerbated the nation’s decline in competitiveness.

The grim and gloomy outlook seems never ending. What the rakyat never seemed to understand is why the endemic corruption and leakages continue unabated. And why, despite the many high-sounding mantras of inclusivity and market-friendly approaches of the PM, is the nation still beholden to a ‘affirmative policy’ that eventually only favours a few business elites well-connected to the power-that-be. Why the divide of the have and the have-little is yawning further post NEP?

As if that wasn’t enough to keep the rakyat in a beleaguered state, the BN-leaders under the premiership of Najib seems least concern if this country is to be torn apart by the spate of race-hate politics that it seems to endear.

Going by the spectre of racial-slurs, inflammatory and venomous rhetoric of political leaders and many an important people, least expected of course would be head of schools, the nation stood numbed to be thinking of what lies ahead of them and their progeny.

As we celebrate this auspicious anniversary, we seemed mired in increasingly rabid and insulting racism, which greatly threatens our already flimsy unity and precarious contrasting diversity.

Perhaps it was never very good anyway of the recent past, but it has surely become a lot worse of late. Never has the rakyat witnessed anything resembling this before, save of course the scourge of 13th May 1969. Without attempting at enumerating the various events, as it pains us further every time it is repeated, you shudder at the thought of what could be the grand finale of it all. God forbids!

The nation, now apparently caught in a transition politics of change and reform, demands that leaders shall no longer turn a deaf ear and a blind eye to the many troubling and turbulent state of the nation.

With this changing landscape of an evolving New Politics and a nascent 2-party system slowly yet surely in place, the writer now implores that timeless moral imperative of Patriotism be similarly contextualised and revisited as to place it in consonant with the changing political context and challenges of an agenda of nation-rebuilding.

The rakyat must be ready to be liberated with information and knowledge, hence becoming a well-informed citizenry that will put in practice the knowledge-based politics that will safeguard the interest of the nation. The rakyat shall no longer be beholden to all power-that-be.

The maxim of the New Politics dictates that it is the Rakyat that is the real stake-holders and the actual boss of democracy, as it is in their power to elect and mandate the government of the day. Incidentally that has always been the imperative of representative democracy. Therefore the rakyat shall not be cowed to abide and support the government when they commit mistakes and worse still insist on committing ‘sins of omissions and commissions’. Volataire famous quote aptly put it that “It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.

The writer now implores and paraphrases the notable quote of Mark Twain, a famous writer when he said “Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.” In the context of our current political scenario it is perhaps pertinent to put the issue to rest conclusively by paraphrasing Edward Abbey, writer and environmentalist in his famous definition that “A Patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government”.

Najib and his government mustn’t be in denial nor flip-flop on critical policies that affect the survival of this nation. The rakyat has now become awakened by the power of New Politics driven by the pervasive alternative media. They are relentlessly demonstrating tremendous desire for arresting the many malaises and correcting the many wrongs of the government.

The entire nation is currently engulfed not in fire but figuratively gutted in racial-hatred and antagonism never seen before. Seeing the racial divide widens sickened this writer and a good many of us, save the racial bigots that strived and thrived in racism.

The country, admitted by World Bank as one of the richest nations on earth by way of resource per capita is languishing in myriad uncertainties and under-performance.

Given the current political-economic backdrop of the nation, it would be foolhardy for Najib’s BN government to expect exuberance of Patriotism to be spontaneously exhibited by the rakyat. As for now it would really be beneficial for leaders of both divides to come to grasp with the challenging task of genuine nation-rebuilding and reform.

It pays to listen to the heart-beats of the nation, the rakyat.

Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Penang For Teoh Beng Hock - Forum Reminder



We cannot and must not allow this to fade away even if our daily life is so occupied with other things. Together we stand to fight those who think that they can get away with torture and murder. Come and support for Teoh Beng Hock's Family


Date : 5/9/10 (Sun)

Time : 2:30pm

Venue : Penang Island (Tentative Han Jiang College, TBC)

Speakers :

Teoh Lee Lan (Teoh Beng Hock's Sister)

Toh Kin Woon (Campaign advisor,former Penang Exco)

P. Ramakrishnan (Aliran President)

Ng Eng Kiat (Suaram Penang)

Jointly Organized by :

Suaram Penang

Aliran

Sembang-Sembang Forum

Penang Liaison Committee of LLG Cultural Development Centre



Note: Please return for further detail on the venue which is advertised tentatively at Han Chiang College.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Raja Petra Kamarudin (RPK) Hardtalk Cancellation-BBC Issued Statement

BBC issued a statement regarding the cancellation of Raja Petra Kamarudin (RPK) hardtalk show. You can read the statement below.

I am among the many Malaysians who are skeptical regarding this BBC statement. The explanation for the cancellation is plain nonsense and stupid to believe. They can always avoid questioning issues that are currently the subject of a current court case in Malaysia, which raise issues of defamation. They can leave out all the defamatory questions and pursue other hundreds of hot non defamatory issues that are happening now in Malaysia and I am sure RPK is comfortable with that.

My conclusion is still that BBC has not come totally clean regarding the cancellation and my believe is that it was dropped due to political pressure from the Malaysian authorities.


BBC Statement

The BBC researches many different stories, it is the normal process of news and current affairs throughout the media that not all make it to air for a variety of editorial reasons.
In this case, it became clear in our research that any comprehensive interview with former Malaysia Today Editor Raja Petra Kamarudin would prominently feature issues that are currently the subject of a current court case in Malaysia, which raise issues of defamation.

The suggestion that the item was dropped due to political pressure is untrue. All BBC programmes adhere to the same strict editorial guidelines which ensure complete editorial independence and impartiality.

BBC Global News
Room 433CB, Bush House, PO Box 76,
Strand, London, WC2B 4PH


source: Malaysia Today

Penang For Beng Hock - Forum



We cannot and must not allow this to fade away even if our daily life is so occupied with other things. Together we stand to fight those who think that they can get away with torture and murder. Come and support for Teoh Beng Hock's Family


Date : 5/9/10 (Sun)

Time : 2:30pm

Venue : Penang Island (Tentative Han Jiang College, TBC)

Speakers :

Teoh Lee Lan (Teoh Beng Hock's Sister)

Toh Kin Woon (Campaign advisor,former Penang Exco)

P. Ramakrishnan (Aliran President)

Ng Eng Kiat (Suaram Penang)

Jointly Organized by :

Suaram Penang

Aliran

Sembang-Sembang Forum

Penang Liaison Committee of LLG Cultural Development Centre



Note: Please return for further detail on the venue which is advertised tentatively at Han Chiang College.

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