By Teoh El Sen
Al Jazeera interviews Marina Mahathir, Khairy
Jamaluddin and Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad on Malaysia's ethnic and religious divide.
PETALING JAYA: Malaysia’s delicate
issue of race and religion was put under the global spotlight in an interview
programme aired by international broadcaster Al Jazeera yesterday.
The
programme – the daily run The Stream, aired live yesterday – touched on recent
controversies which brushed Malaysia, including the issue of the use of the
word “Allah”, the proselytisation of Muslims and the “racist” 8TV
advertisement.
The
programme was hosted by Derrick Ashong who interviewed well known political
commentator Marina Mahathir, Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin and PKR’s Nik
Nazmi Nik Ahmad for their views on how to tackle the nation’s most prickly
problems.
Despite
having differing views on who was to blame over the issues, all three agreed
that Malaysia must move away from race and religion based politics for the
nation to move forward.
Khairy, who
is also the MP for Rembau, said ethnicity was gradually becoming a less
important basis for politics and government.
“In
Malaysia, people are moving towards post-modern politics that is not based on
race and religion. It is not to say ethnic and religious issues are not
important and do not gain traction among people, and of course it is being
exacerbated by politicians.”
“But I would say, going forward in 10 to 20 years, ethnicity
and religion as political issues would play less of an important role especially
when people are more inclusive in their world view and the
future of the country,” he added.
future of the country,” he added.
When posed
a question on how Malaysia could promote the 1Malaysia concept when the ruling
BN was still practicing race-based politics, Khairy rejected the accusation
that BN could not bring about unity.
“I think
that’s a very common criticism of the BN. I disagree vehemently with that
categorisation. I don’t think BN is incompatible with national unity,” he said,
adding that even the opposition has a party that was based on a single religion
and another dominated by one ethnic group.
Streamlining the NEP
Khairy said despite having ethnic-based parties, the BN “works because we govern on the basis of consensus” and said “ultimately it is the policies that matter and the agreements between the parties for national interest”.
Khairy said despite having ethnic-based parties, the BN “works because we govern on the basis of consensus” and said “ultimately it is the policies that matter and the agreements between the parties for national interest”.
He was also
asked as to how government policies can be fair if the federal constitution
“enshrines an inherent bias”, to which Khairy said there was not a single
political party currently willing to say that they would abolish Article 153
from the constitution.
“The constitution says specifically certain things are
accorded to Malays and some to non-Malays. However, some of the policies have
expanded that into other areas of economy and it has become
overreaching. These are some of the things we can work on, these policies we can reform in the
future,” said Khairy.
overreaching. These are some of the things we can work on, these policies we can reform in the
future,” said Khairy.
Khairy
added that the government was trying to streamline the NEP to ensure it doesn’t
distort the market, become an impediment to economic growth and that necessary
help goes to deserving Malays.
“It is a
valid criticism in the past that it went to undeserving bumiputeras and the
politically connected. What we are trying to foster is an environment of merit
and competition within the Malay community so eventually we can scale back some
of these provisions to ensure a level playing field for all,” he said.
BN still in the past
Nik Nazmi, who is PKR
communications director, meanwhile put the blame on racial and religious
politicking squarely on the BN.
He said
that in Malaysia, times have changed and people have moved on, but “BN has not
moved with the times and that creates the tension today.”
To a
question on the government’s control of the media, Nik Nazmi said that the
ruling coalition has used the race card to built a “seige mentality” in the
population, which was very unhealthy.
“Race
issues are consuming our attention disproportionately in Malaysia at the
expense of discussions on health policies, economic policies and so forth,” he
said.
Nik Nazmi
agreed that ethnic based politics could only be done away with when there are
no more ethnic-based parties.
“This model
is something of the past, it is destroying the Malaysian politics. It was said
that a Malay politician may not have a single chauvinist bone in his body but
in order to rise he has to play the race game.
“This is
what happens in Umno. In multi-racial parties like PKR for example, I can’t be
racist because I’ll be voted out,” he said.
Nik Nazmi
said that the constitution may have its “idiosyncracies” that were
unsymmetrical between the rights and freedom between the different communities,
but added that the country was much fairer in the past.
“Equality
is also one of the fundamental rights in the federal constitution. That is what
we find increasingly ignored and forgotten,” he said.
Marina worried
Marina lamented the fact that race and religion were what politicians talked about all the time but said that Malaysia has “worked pretty well all this time”.
Marina lamented the fact that race and religion were what politicians talked about all the time but said that Malaysia has “worked pretty well all this time”.
However,
she said, the issue now was “whether that balance that our forefathers
envisioned are being disturbed, because now communities perhaps are taking
bigger space, insisting and constantly griping about not getting their dues”.
Asked if
she was referring the the Malay population, Marina said there were some
politicians who continue to insist that they always have to have more.
She
expressed her worry that the future looked bleak if the unhappiness of the
non-Malays persist, the braindrain continues and the Malays continue to have
higher birthrates.
“Unless we
have leaders who are really committed in ensuring the continuation of the
Malaysian diversity, that’s the way its gonna go, sadly.”
Source : FMT
EmpireMoney.com
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