Cabinet tomorrow should
support the establishment of a parliamentary select committee on
marginalization of the Indian community which should be given three months
to submit its first report by early March next year
_____________
Media Conference
by Lim Kit Siang
________________
(Parliament,
Tuesday):
The Barisan Nasional leaders,
led by Deputy Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak, should stop their
truculent and confrontational responses to the Sunday 30,000 Hindraf
demonstration in Kuala Lumpur, as illustrated by the following:
• Saber-rattling and tough
language like newspaper headlines, “Kerajaan tidak gentar –
Perhimpunan Hindraf jelas bermotif politik – Najib” (Utusan
Malaysia) and “‘WE WON’T BACK DOWN’ – We will meet the challenge –
Najib” (New Straits Times);
• warning of dire action by UMNO leaders including the use of Internal
Security Act; and
• Condemnation by Barisan Nasional MPs like the MP for Jasin Datuk Mohd
Said Yusof branding the Hindraf leaders as “kurang ajar” and demanding
action to be taken against them.
Instead of threatening all
sorts of dire consequences against the Hindraf organizers and supporters,
the Cabinet should offer an olive branch to acknowledge the legitimacy of
the long-standing grievances of the Indian community at becoming the most
marginalized group after 50 years of Merdeka by taking the following
measures:
• Unconditional release of all
136 Hindraf supporters arrested during Sunday’s demonstration;
• Withdraw all charges and proceedings against Hindraf organizers,
including P. Uthayakumar, P. Waytha Moorthy and V. Ganabatirau.
• Establish a commission of inquiry into the police handling of the
Hindraf demonstration on Sunday;
• Support the establishment of a parliamentary select committee on the
marginalization of the Indian community which should be given three months
to submit its first report by early March next year.
In my first parliamentary
speech when I returned to Parliament after the 2004 general election, I
had called for a Parliamentary Select Committee on the Marginalization of
the Malaysian Indian community, the new underclass in the country.
I had quoted the paper “Election 2004: New Politics for Indian Malaysians”
presented by “Group of Concerned Citizens” which had summarized nine
long-standing fundamental issues faced by Indian Malaysians, as proper
agenda to constitute the terms of reference of the Parliamentary Select
Committee on the Marginalization of the Malaysian Indian community, viz:
• The number of Indian youth
dying in police custody has increased;
• The socio-economic inequality between the Indian poor and rich and
between other communities has worsened;
• The State has not responded effectively in addressing social ills in the
community;
• The State policies towards and financial allocation for Tamil schools
remains pitiful;
• The University intake policy has been a source of major distress for the
community;
• The State has not stepped in to help resolve the MAIKA scandal;
• The Kampung Medan racially-motivated killings have not been brought to a
closure. No public inquiry was instituted.
Low cost housing needs of the
Indian poor have not been adequately addressed;
The negative consequences of the final breakdown of the plantation economy
on the Indian rural poor have still not are regulated. Aggressive
displacement of Indian Malaysians is a serious problem.
There will now have to be a tenth term of reference – the rampant
demolition of Hindu temples and disregard of the religious rights and
sensitivities of the Malaysian Indian community.
On June 4, 2004 I had written to the Works Minister and MIC President,
Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, asking for his support in Cabinet for the
establishment of a Parliamentary Select Committee to break the back of the
problem of the marginalization of the Indian community, as the Indians in
Malaysia had not received commensurate benefits from decades of national
development.
Although Samy Vellu expressed support for the proposal for the
establishment of a Parliamentary Select Committee on the Marginalization
of the Indian Community when he received my letter, nothing has been heard
on the matter in the past three years.
Will the Cabinet heed the “cry of desperation” of the Malaysian Indian
community as symbolized by the Hindraf demonstration on Sunday – or will
it remain blind, deaf and mute to the growing sense of despair,
disillusionment and alienation of Malaysian Indians?
(27/11/2007)
* Lim
Kit Siang, Parliamentary
Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic
Planning Commission Chairman |