It is obvious that visiting Indian premier Manmohan Singh won himself quite a few fans in Malaysia with his humility, breadth and depth of intellect, which was all the more amplified by the weak speech made by his host Prime Minister Najib Razak.
“Manmohan's speech was impressive, humble yet powerful. He talked about Vivekananda, the contribution of Malaysian Indians and the humanism of Tagore. It showed the level of his statesmanship and carried a very meaningful message to the Indian community here,” Batu MP Tian Chua, who made a special trip to Brickfields to watch the Indian leader, told Malaysia Chronicle.
“Najib only talked about himself, his walkabouts on the second day when he became PM, how he visited and about eating curry in Brickfields - sounded like a typical election campaign speech.”
But Tian might have hit the nail on the head. Indeed, Najib has been blowing hot on snap general elections and last week reminded his Umno party more than once to prepare for polls. His administration has until 2013 to call for national elections but he is widely expected to do so next year.
| As in India, temples are a way of life for most M'sian Indians |
"I am confident that the Malaysian system has built-in flexibility to tackle any problem of the kind you mentioned," news-portal IBNlive reported Manmohan as saying at a joint press conference with Najib. He was responding to reporters' questions on the racial discrimination against the Indian community here.
Najib was quick to assert that his government was confident India would respect what he termed was a “purely domestic matter” and “what we do” to resolve it.
“This is purely a domestic matter for us to handle and we are handling it very positively. We don't have to discuss such matters between the two countries," said the Malaysian leader.
Economic neglect, custodial deaths
Malaysian Indians, mostly from southern state of Tamil Nadu, form one of the largest overseas communities of Indians in the world. Ethnic Indians, who immigrated in the early part of the last century and worked mostly in rubber plantations, now form 8 percent of a fast-growing 28 million population.
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| 22-year old Kugan - beaten to death while in police custody |
Apart from economic deprivation, local activists say the factor that Malaysian Indians needed to highlight to the world was the way the police force has continually beaten and tortured to death Indian suspects caught and taken into remand to 'help' investigations.
“Recent cases include the murder of 22-year old Kugan Ananthan, the open-verdict for R Gunasegaran even though 4 people saw the police beating him, and most recently on Monday, one the eyewitness in the Gunasegaran inquest, K Selvachandan, was also beaten up and arrested – and this was just about 24 hours before Mr Singh’s arrival in KL,” PKR vice president Sivarasa Rasiah told Malaysia Chronicle.
In late 2007, more than 20,000 Malaysian Indians took part in a massive demonstration in Kuala Lumpur. Enraged at the government’s refusal to hear their pleas, they travelled from all corners of the country to protest.
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| Waving M'sian flags, Gandhi posters, they stood their ground |
Months later, in March 2008, Malaysians of all races voted with their hearts, throwing their support behind Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim’s Pakatan Rakyat coalition and withdrawing the two-thirds parliamentary majority they have been giving to the Umno-BN since 1957.
“No need for Malaysian Indians to lose heart because Najib didn’t win, Umno-BN didn't win. You see, Manmohan is bound by diplomatic etiquette not to criticize his hosts. I am not sure when we will have the next general elections, but for us, it is an everyday struggle and Pakatan will continue to fight for all the races including the Indians of course,” said Tian.




























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