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Sep 23, 06 5:11pm
Politics of denial!
This is how opposition party DAP views the objection
raised by Barisan Nasional (BN) leaders to Singapore
Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew’s claim that Chinese
Malaysians are marginalised.
DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng expressed
‘disgust’ with MCA president Ong Ka Ting and Gerakan
top leaders Dr Lim Keng Yaik and Dr Koh Tsu Koon for
denying an ‘obvious fact’.
“... The Chinese and other non-Chinese have been
systematically marginalised by discriminatory
government policies that only favour the rich and
politically connected,” he said in a statement
today.
“Such politics of denial is dishonest as BN leaders
themselves have stated that discriminatory policies
such as quotas and the New Economic Policy (NEP) are
necessary for racial harmony and national
stability,” he added.
He said as long as BN leaders, including former
premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad, cannot rely on reason,
facts and logic to disprove Lee’s claim, then “their
emotional denials are like empty vessels making the
most noise to cover up the politics of Umno
dominance and discrimination.”
Perverse logic
The DAP leader also took Koh to task for saying that
the minister mentor did not understand and
appreciate the challenges in administering a country
bigger, more complicated and diverse than Singapore.
“This is perverse logic. If so, then can we support
the apartheid policies of South Africa in the 1980s
just because South Africa is bigger, more diverse
and complicated than Malaysia?
“How can Koh (who is also Penang chief minister) be
so thick skin to say the Chinese are not compliant
when he was compliant towards Umno by not daring to
even respond to the attacks by Penang Umno Youth
leaders who humiliated him publicly with
demonstrations and banners?” he asked.
Lim then trained his crosshairs on the MCA
president, who argued that it was unfair and
subjective to say the Chinese in Malaysia are
marginalised because any injustices will be resolved
by MCA.
“If that is the case, why is it that in cabinet,
four MCA ministers could not convince but had to
submit and bow to one Education Minister
Hishammuddin Hussein?” he asked.
He was referring to Hishammuddin’s public
admonishing of Deputy Higher Education Minister and
MCA vice-president Ong Tee Keat over a disclosure
that Education Ministry officials had allegedly
pocketed funds meant for vernacular schools.
Tee Keat was also reprimanded by the cabinet for his
action.
“(What is) worse, Ong has not explained why he
supported the Ninth Malaysia Plan’s refusal to build
a single Chinese or Tamil school out of the 180 new
primary schools proposed,” he added.
'Selfish acts'
As for Keng Yaik’s statement that the “Chinese here
will not follow and listen to what he says”, Lim
said it reflected how out of touch BN leaders are
with the feelings of ordinary Malaysians.
At a press conference yesterday, Keng Yaik, who is
Gerakan president, urged journalists to report that
what Lee had said “was wrong, wrong.”
Meanwhile, Lim described the ‘false denials’ by BN’s
Chinese leaders as ‘selfish and politically
motivated’ to enable them to cling on to their
government posts.
Lee ruffled feathers recently when he said that the
Chinese in Malaysia and Indonesia have been
systematically marginalised.
He said this was because Malaysia and Indonesia had
problems with the Chinese because the community was
successful through their hard work.
“In fact, Lee is half right in that it is not only
the Chinese who are marginalised. The Indians and
poor Malays are also marginalised,” said the DAP
secretary-general.
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