Only a fair and just Malaysia can make the real
difference. That is what the new paradigm calls for. This what Hindraf
calls for.
By N Ganesan
Three significant characteristics of the system of Malaysian electoral politics make it inimical to the interests of the Indian poor. It is based on simple electoral majorities, it is ethnocentric and it works to provide moral cover for the Malaysian elite.
Three significant characteristics of the system of Malaysian electoral politics make it inimical to the interests of the Indian poor. It is based on simple electoral majorities, it is ethnocentric and it works to provide moral cover for the Malaysian elite.
And it has become conventional wisdom that since Indians do not form a
majority in any single constituency, and are an economically depressed
community it will be nigh impossible to gain true representation for
Indian socio-economic interests which implies that it will continue to
be dependent on the largesse of the party in power.
Hindraf challenges these three assumptions and the first stones were
cast with the 2007 Hindraf rally. Hindraf has been unrelenting in this
challenge ever since.
Effectively what Hindraf is seeking for the Indian minority community
is a more equitable power sharing formula that addresses these inherent
weaknesses of the system as far as minorities are concerned.
What Hindraf is seeking is a more just Malaysia, where the citizens
worth or rights is not determined by their ethnicity or their economic
status, but by more fundamental and natural rights as citizens.
Hindraf works for the larger cause of a more just Malaysia, regardless of what Hindraf’s detractors have to say.
Given the workings of the electoral system the leading parties must
yet win the Indians votes, so they can continue to rule. They therefore
resort to a wide range of deception to garner the Indian votes.
One key technique is to have Indians in their ranks in the State
Assemblies and in the Parliament and tout it as Indian representation.
They try very hard with Makkal Sakthi, MIC and the latest addition to
this motley list, Indraf to achieve this deception.
Truly representative policies for the socio-economic interests of the
Indians are non –existent on both sides of the political spectrum. This
has been de facto BN policy for 55 years and stated (yes, stated)
Pakatan policy in the last 4 years.
Hindraf for its part wants to see changes to the forces driving the
increasing criminalization of the Indian youth, the increasing
oppression and marginalization of the Indian poor, the continuing denial
of life opportunities, the chronic underemployment of Indian, the
chronic poor life performance of the Indian poor.
Can anyone deny that neither BN nor Pakatan have stepped up to this plate?
Unimaginative deceptions
The Indians who are really crying out for fundamental change in the performance of the Malaysian socio-political system are the Indians in the lowest rungs of Malaysian society.
The Indians who are really crying out for fundamental change in the performance of the Malaysian socio-political system are the Indians in the lowest rungs of Malaysian society.
All the BN and Pakatan coalitions have done is to keep imitating each
other in their approach to the problem. BN keeps on bribing and
promising and asking for Nambikei. Pakatan touts cosmetic efforts such
as the appointment of a Deputy Chief Minister or increases in allocation
to Tamil schools or naming streets after Indians as their approach to
the problem.
They both fail miserably with these unimaginative deceptions. They completely ignore the problem.
It is not that BN and Pakatan are missing the point. They just do not
have it in their current political DNA to address issues of the working
class Indian poor. The not so obvious truth is that both only represent
interests of factions of the moneyed Malaysian elite.
BN represents the Malay elite, which has been on the ascendancy for
the last 40 odd years. Pakatan by default now increasingly represents
the Chinese elite and a smaller disgruntled section of the Malay elite.
Being the elite, their preoccupation is to get control of the levers
of policy so that they can garner the resources of the nation
disproportionately to themselves.
In the next GE, the choice for the Indians as Helen Ang puts it in
her article (Hindraf in slipstream of two-race system- June 3, 2012
FMT) is not between the Chinese and the Malays, it is really between
the Chinese elite and the Malay elite.
Being the elite, like elite everywhere else in the world, their
primary preoccupation is to control the levers of policy, so they can
usurp the larger part of the resources of this nation. Ethnicity matters
only to the extent of gaining that control.
The contention between the Chinese elite and the Malay elite is
intensifying. The period of post-Merdeka collusion between the two
elites within the BN and the consequent marginalisation of the DAP is
gone and now the Chinese and Malay elites are standing eye to eye in
contention – why else have the towkays abandoned MCA and openly shifted
their support to the DAP.
So it is between the Chinese elite and the Malay elite that the
Indian poor have to choose from. The experience with the Malay elite has
been one of systematic discrimination, racism and marginalisation for
the Indian poor.
The experience with the Chinese elite and the smaller section of the
Malay elite has been equally a disastrous for the Indian poor in a much
shorter space of time – if you look at the experience of the poor
Indians in Kedah, in Penang, in Perak, and in Selangor. If you have been
watching the issues we have raised in Pakatan controlled states in
these columns, the story is clear.
This experience suggests it makes no significant difference to the
Indian poor either way. If things are not going to change, not voting
for either is clearly an option for the Indian poor – why should they
vote for either? What is the point? There is no religion here –only
simple pragmatics.
What 1Malaysia?
The demands of the Indian poor are encompassed in the 18 point demand of Hindraf which Hindraf has persisted with, since its formulation. If either of the elite wants the votes of the Indian poor, they can have it in its entirety but they need to adjust the power sharing formula to accommodate these demands.
The demands of the Indian poor are encompassed in the 18 point demand of Hindraf which Hindraf has persisted with, since its formulation. If either of the elite wants the votes of the Indian poor, they can have it in its entirety but they need to adjust the power sharing formula to accommodate these demands.
This effectively means creating a new paradigm for Malaysia. It does not matter that this sounds farfetched now.
When Galileo first suggested the earth was not the centre of the
Universe no one gave him an ear but history does have its way of bearing
out the truth ultimately.
There is no 1Malaysia, there are any number of Malaysias as there are
ethnic groups in the country today. And there are as many impotent
policies and programs as there are issues working against the social,
economic and cultural development of Malaysia.
BN’s ETP is a pie in the sky program with little mooring in the
political reality of a multiethnic, multicultural Malaysia. Pakatan’s
program sounds good but can it even bridge the most obvious difference
between the Islamic state agenda and the Malaysian Malaysia agenda of
its component parties So is there really any substance here either.
The reality of Malaysia is that every ethnic group is here to stay. They are not going anywhere.
Every Malaysian will continue to live here and die here. Everyone
must do well or no one will do well. Pushing and shoving is not going to
cut it. Only a fair and just Malaysia can make the real difference.
That is what the new paradigm calls for. This what Hindraf calls for.
If Pakatan or BN can indeed rise to this challenge they can have the Indian vote in-toto. But only if they can do this.
They now need to come up with a plan by which they are going to
address the 18 point demand – which they know is bitter medicine, but
they do know it is medicine. Medicine that our country so sorely needs.
Their political imperative requires they win the forthcoming
elections and that imperative can certainly produce the necessary
political will to accept the challenge that Hindraf is throwing at them.
If they think they can win it with their Makkal Sakthi parties and
MIC and Indrafs they do so at their own peril. Plus if they have
deception planned up their sleeves they are only postponing whatever it
is that is that we raise here.
They need to come up with a binding and a real program, announce it
and immediately begin work on it and there is a chance we will come out
like we did in 2008 in favour of whoever does this.
Otherwise the Chinese elite and the Malay elite can fight it out and
let the bloody mess continue. Let this go on for more years and maybe
one day in the future they will find the wisdom in Hindraf’s challenge.
The writer is Hindraf’s national advisor.
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