Category: Lim Kit Siang Kini

  • Cameron Highlands by-election is in fact the opening shot of PH for the 15th General Election to capture the Pahang State Government to be able to resolve the land problem of the Orang Asli

    Cameron Highlands by-election is in fact the opening shot of PH for the 15th General Election to capture the Pahang State Government to be able to resolve the land problem of the Orang Asli

    Cameron Highlands is the cynosure of the country for a historic by-election which will be held this month to determine who will be the Member of Parliament for Cameron Highlands. Former Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is confident that Barisan Nasional will have an easy victory in the by-election. But just as he was proven wrong in the last general election in May last year when he was confident of an easy and great victory to the extent of BN winning back the two-thirds parliamentary majority, I hope that Najib will be proven wrong again that BN will have a victory in the Cameron Highlands by-election.

    Let us work hard for M. Manogaram’s victory as Member of Parliament for Cameron Highlands in the by-election. The Cameron Highlands by-election will be an unique one. MIC wanted to appeal against the Election Court decision which ruled that MIC Vice President C. Sivarraajh’s election as Member of Parliament for Cameron Highlands in May last year was null and void because of corrupt election practices, but was overruled by UMNO to protect UMNO, in particular the Pahang Mentri Besar who is the Assemblyman for Jelai so that the Pahang Mentri Besar’s electoral corruption practices are not further highlighted. I will not be surprised if MIC is also not allowed to contest in the Cameron Highlands by-election by UMNO, for high stakes are involved in this by-election: it is not only a life-and-death political battle for the Pahang Mentri Besar, it is also a life-and-death political battle for UMNO and Barisan Nasional.

    The Cameron Highlands by-election is also important for Pakatan Harapan, for it is the first by-election after the last general election involving a seat of Barisan Nasional as the previous three Selangor State Assembly by-elections and the Port Dickson parliamentary by-election involved Pakatan Harapan seats. I will go one step further – the Cameron Highlands by-election is in fact the opening shot of Pakatan Harapan for the 15th General Election to capture the Pahang State Governement to be able to resolve the land problem of the Orang Asli.

  • Lim Kit Siang : Najib had failed the Orang Aslis as Prime Minister

    Lim Kit Siang : Najib had failed the Orang Aslis as Prime Minister

    Najib had failed the Orang Aslis as Prime Minister by focusing on the international 1MDB corruption and money-laundering scandal instead of bringing the Orang Asli into the national mainstream of development. One question uppermost in the minds of the voters of Cameron Highlands is why the former Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak, is positioning himself as the primary spokesman for the Barisan Nasional in the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26.

    Najib said in Pekan yesterday that he is confident that the Barisan Nasional will retain its victory in the Cameron Highlands by-election on Jan 26. As former Prime Minister, why Najib had no sense of shame that the Cameron Highlands by-election is being held because of money-politics, vote-buying and corrupt electoral practices? I have said that it would require a miracle for the Pakatan Harapan to win the Cameron Highlands by-election, as the seat had always been one of the Barisan Nasional fortresses as evidenced by the fact that the seat had never been won by any other coalition in the nation’s history. But we are in the era of political miracles, starting with the historic result of the 14th General Election on May 9, 2018 despite Najib’s supreme confidence of an easy victory in the 14GE, even for Barisan Nasional to win back two-thirds parliamentary majority lost in the 12th General Election 10 years ago in 2008. The Cameron Highlands by-election is therefore a second opportunity to prove Najib wrong – and this time, by the voters of Cameron Highlands.

    It is regrettable that Najib is resorting to cheap and low-class politics, which required the Director-General of the Department of Orang Asli Development (JAKOA), Datuk Ajis Sitin to issue a statement yesterday to refute the former Prime Minister’s allegation that the Pakatan Harapan government did not provide allocation for the Orang Asli community in Budget 2019. Ajis said the Pakatan Harapan government allocated RM100 million for the development and welfare of the Orang Asli community nationwide and the focus will be on the construction and upgrade of roads to facilitate Orang Asli in their daily activities to raise their socio-economic status. Najib also launched an attack on me for saying that the previous BN government had neglected the Orang Asli. There can be no doubt that Najib, as the sixth Prime Minister of Malaysia for eight years, had failed the Orang Asli in the country by focusing on the international 1MDB corruption and money-laundering scandal and other 1MDB-line scandals in Felda, Felcra, MARA and Tabung Haji instead of bringing the Orang Asli into the national mainstream of development.

    Is Najib prepared to compare the total amount of public funds squandered in the 1MDB scandal and the other 1MDB-like scandals with the total expenditures spent on Orang Asli development in his eight years as Prime Minister? It is a crying shame that after six decades of JAKOA history, only about 30 per cent of JAKOA staff are Orang Asli and only two JAKOA State Directors are from the Orang Asli community, when by now, after more than six decades of JOKOA, at least 70 per cent of the JAKOA staff and all State JOKOA Directors should have come from the Orang Asli community. There are 27 Orang Asli kampongs in the Cameron Highlands constituency, involving 1,637 families with a total population of 6,976 people. If Najib had not focused his attention and energies on tne 1MBD scandal and other 1MDB-linked scandals, bogged down in corruption and abuses of power to such extent that Malaysia was condemned by the world as a “global kleptocracy” and he had devoted more funding and resources for the development of the Orang Aslis, the plight of the Orang Aslis in Cameron Highlands today would be in a better position.

    Does Najib deny that in this modern age of Internet where information travels at the speed of light, some 20 per cent of the Orang Aslis in the Cameron Highlands constituency live without electricity. Can Najib define what he understands as the meaning of the full success of JAKOA?

  • Manogaran will be voice of Orang Asli, not only from Cameron Highlands but of Malaysia, in Parliament if he is elected MP on January 26

    Manogaran will be voice of Orang Asli, not only from Cameron Highlands but of Malaysia, in Parliament if he is elected MP on January 26

    M. Manogaran will be the voice of Orang Asli, not only from Cameron Highlands, but from all over Malaysia, in Parliament if he is elected Member of Parliamnt for Cameron Highands on January 26. Although MIC Vice President C Sivarraajh was elected Member of Parliament from May 9, 2018 until the end of November when his election was declared null and void because of money politics and electoral corruption, Sivaraajh had not asked a single question on the problems of the Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands in the two parliamentary meetings in the six months he was MP.

    This despite the fact that Cameron Highands is the parliamentary constituency with the largest number of Orang Aslis in the country, followed by Tapan and Gua Musang. This is an example of his irresponsibility and negligence as MP for Cameron Highlands. Former Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib had said that Cameron Highlands by-election should be easy victory for the Barisan Nasional. Two questions arises: Firstly, is Najib still the leader of Barisan Nasional. Secondly, does Barisan Nasional still exist, as MCA wants the people to believe that Barisan Nasional is to be dissolved. May be the new MCA President, Datuk Seri Wee Ka Siong can explain whether the MCA will help in the Barisan Nasional campaign in the Cameron Highlands by-election, as PAS has stated that it would help BN in the by-election campaign.

  • The battle against kleptocracy must be widened to include not only the kleptocrats but also the “enablers of kleptocracy”

    The battle against kleptocracy must be widened to include not only the kleptocrats but also the “enablers of kleptocracy”

    The battle against kleptocracy must be widened to include not only the kleptocrats but also the “enablers of kleptocracy” to ensure that the culture of integrity strikes deep root in Malaysia in our journey to transform a global kleptocracy into a leading nation of integrity. The New Year of 2019 has only entered into the fourth day but it is pregnant with meaning for Malaysians who want to see the culture of integrity strike deep root in Malaysia in our journey to transform a global kleptocracy into a leading a nation of integrity, with the battle against kleptocracy widened to include a war not only against kleptocrats but also against the “enablers of kleptocracy”!

    It is good to see that a top MCA leader has acknowledged the existence of “enablers of kleptocracy” in a media statement dated 1st January 2019, although the MCA leadership has still to pluck up sufficient political courage and patriotism to acknowledge that the ignominious chapter in the nation’s history where the country was condemned worldwide as a “global kleptocracy” was because MCA Ministers and leaders became “enablers of kleptocracy”, aiding and abetting former Prime Minister Datuk Seri Datuk Seri Najib Razak in the monstrous 1MDB corruption and money-laundering scandal and other 1MDB-line scandals in Felda, Felcra, Tabung Haji and MARA. Malaysians must adopt the attitude that governments can come and go, but the campaign to improve Malaysia’s integrity in the international community must continue relentlessly, as reflected in the various integrity indices, like the annual Transparency International Corruption Perception Index.

    This is why on final days of 2018, I had called for a step closer to closure of the monstrous 1MDB scandal and kleptocratic Malaysia with all who had aided and abetted Najib in his kleptocratic rule – including former Ministers and MPs – apologising to all Malaysians for being “enablers of Najib kleptocracy” instead of carrying the cross of being “enablers of kleptocracy” into the new year, like the MCA President Datuk Seri Wee Ka Siong and the PAS President, Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang. Furthermore, I had also urged all political parties and politicians, including MPs of the 13th Parliament, to return to public coffers any funding and donations they had received from the 1MDB scandal.

    The first three days of 2019 had begun with a fantastic start with regard to the sacred task to implant the culture of integrity in Malaysia so as to transform Malaysia from a global kleptocracy into a leading nation of integrity. Firstly, there was continuing public debate and expression of shock by a widening circle of Malaysian society over Bersatu vice-president Abdul Rashid Abdul Rahman’s call for the party to use government resources so that it can hold on to power “by hook or by crook”. I believe the overwhelming majority of Pakatan Harapan leaders and members do not want to hold on to power “by hook or by crook” or the Pakatan Harapan would be no different from Najib’s UMNO and Barisan Nasional. The year 2019 will be a test whether Pakatan Harapan government in Putrajaya is committed to electoral and institutional reforms to ensure that the culture of integrity strike deep roots in Malaysian society, and Malaysia is looked up as a model by the world in our commitment to accountability, transparency, integrity and good governance.

    I fully support Bersih’s call for an Administrative Neutrality Act to deal with political patronage, as well as the abuse of government resources or public power for partisan purposes. Those who commit crimes should face criminal prosecution, while those who fail to justify their acts must be subject to administrative penalties, such as termination of service, demotion or transfer. Parliament should enact a Political Financing Control Act, as stated under Promise 18 in Harapan’s election manifesto, as a measure against the misappropriation and misuse of funds belonging to the government by political parties, as in the 1MDB scandal. Secondly, Malaysians can take heart from the Muar incident over the allegation of 30 per cent commission demanded by politicians over educational development allocations to schools, and the alacrity with which the Minister of Youth and Sports and MP for Muar, Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman, had acted in asking his office to lodge a police report over an individual claiming to be “an assistant of the Muar MP” and soliciting 30% commission for services.

    Thirdly, the Court of Appeal decision yesterday upholding the Kuala Lumpur Sessions Court decision on Feb. 19, 2016 jailing the former Pahang Umno Youth chief Datuk Mohd Mustafa Mohd Khalid for three years for cheating a managing director of a company of RM1 million over a Scanning System project. It is a clear and unmistakable signal that the era that politicians and political operatives can get away with corruption and bribery with immunity and impunity is over, and there is a new respect for the rule of law to maintain public integrity in Malaysia. Fourthly, and most important of all, the country will be holding a parliamentary by-election because we are entering a new phase where there must also be integrity in the electoral process, where there is no money politics and electoral offences in elections.

    The Cameron Highlands parliamentary by-election on January 26 will be the first of its kind, heralding that the country is committed to integrity in its public institutions and systems. The Camerons Highlands by-election should be between integrity as represented by Pakatan Harapan and kleptocracy as represented by Barisan Nasional. It was from the Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands that I learn the term “roti canai” roads, ie. substandard roads, because of poor workmanship and corruption. These “roti canai” roads rapidly deteriorate as there is only a thin film of cement on top to hide the shoddy work. Let the Cameron Highlands signal the advent of a New Malaysia, where corruption and improprieties in any form are condemned and penalised. Is the Barisan Nasional prepared to enter into a pledge of public integrity in the Cameron Highlands by-election, highlighting the national resolve and commitment to instil a culture of integrity in public life including an unremitting war not only against kleptocracy but also against the enablers of kleptocracy in Malaysia in the past few years?

    (Media Statement by DAP MP for Iskandar Puteri Lim Kit Siang in Kuala Lumpur on Friday, 4th January 2019)

  • Diversion of 30 per cent or any percentage of school allocation for any political purpose is sheer corruption

    Diversion of 30 per cent or any percentage of school allocation for any political purpose is sheer corruption

    Diversion of 30 per cent or any percentage of school allocation for any political purpose is sheer corruption and not permitted Pakatan Harapan practice but belongs to Barisan Nasional era of the past, and must be exposed and rooted out and individuals concerned punished according to the law and sacked if he holds any political office. Since 7 pm yesterday, the Sin Chew street edition had carried a shocking front-page expose of compulsory diversion of 30 per cent of school allocations in Muar allegedly by a special officer of an elected representative.

    The diversion of 30 per cent or any percentage of school allocation for any political purpose is sheer corruption and not permitted Pakatan Harapan practice but belongs to Barisan Nasional era of the past, and must be exposed and rooted out and the individuals concerned punished according to the law and sacked if he holds any political office. There can be no compromise with such corrupt practices and those who are guilty of such corrupt practices, regardless of which Pakatan Harapan party they are from, must be prosecuted to the hilt without any mercy.

  • Annuar Musa as good as admitting that UMNO/BN had been committing “daylight robberies” to overstay in power in Putrajaya

    Annuar Musa as good as admitting that UMNO/BN had been committing “daylight robberies” to overstay in power in Putrajaya

    Media Statement by LIM KIT SIANG : I am surprised by the outburst by the UMNO Secretary-General Tan Sri Annuar Musa yesterday contesting my claim that DAP and Pakatan Harapan will be the underdogs in the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26, 2019, and that my being trapped in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama in Ulu Jelai on New Year’s Eve was an indictment of the failures and neglect of the UMNO/Barisan Nasional government over the last few decades to uplift the Orang Asli community into the mainstream of national development, where the Orang Asli community can enjoy access to the most basic necessities which the Orang Asli people are entitled to as citizens of Malaysia, whether in medical aid, educational and economic opportunities, basic infrastructure facilities of clean water and electricity, and most important of all to them, land rights.

    Annuar was shedding crocodile’s tears. If Pakatan Harapan is in the business of abuse of powers and misuse of government resources, I would not be trapped in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama on New Year’s Eve, as a helicopter would have been summoned to fly me out of Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama, leaving the Semais to be cut off from the outside world – in an era of information when information travels at the speed of light. Imagine Najib when he was Prime Minister being trapped in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama on New Year’s Eve, completely cut off from the world outside? Unthinkable! But no helicopter lifted me out of Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama on New Year’s Eve – the most powerful proof that Pakatan Harapan is not UMNO or Barisan Nasional. In fact, it was only after I was trapped in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama that I found out that the director-general of Orang Asli Development Department (Jakoa) for the past seven months is a local Orang Asli from Kuala Koyan, Datuk Ajis Sitin.

    This illustrates the second major difference between Pakatan Harapan and Barisan Nasional. In the former during old times, the JAKOA director-general would be required to be part of the visit delegation into the Orang Asli interior, and every spot of the visit followed and anticipated. Was it conceivable that the Director of JAKOA would have been trapped to spend a night in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama, completely cut off from the outside world? In fact, after realising that the Director-General of JAKOA is a local Orang Asli from Ulu Jelai, Cameron Highlands, I paid him a courtesy call in the JAKOA headquarters yesterday. He told me that the three Orang Asli areas which require the most efforts in upliftment in Peninsular Malaysia were Ulu Perak, Ulu Kelantan and Ulu Jelai, with the Ulu Jelai the most backward of all. Ajis, a senior civil engineer at the Public Works Department, served as deputy director-general (development) of JAKOA last October before he became the JAKOA director-general.

    I am quite encouraged by Annuar’s outburst over my speech at Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama on New Year’s Eve that it would be a “miracle” for the DAP/Pakatan Harapan candidate to win the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26, for two reasons. Firstly, it is an indication that such a “miracle” might happen. Was Annuar suggesting that the Pakatan Harapan’s victories in four previous by-elections after the 14th General Election – Sungai Kandis, Seri Setia and Balakong state assembly by-elections in Selangor and the Port Dickson parliamentary by-election – were “daylight robberies” by Pakatan Harapan? If so, why such a wild allegation had not been made after these four by-elections, but only being made now by the UMNO Secretary-General? Secondly, Annuar was as good as admitting that UMNO and Barisan Nasional had been committing “daylight robberies” to overstay in power in Putrajaya, enabling them to continue to be ensconced in power in Putrajaya in total disregard of the democratic principle of “one man, one vote, one value”!

    In responding to my statement that that it would be a “miracle” if DAP and Pakatan Harapan wins the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26, Annuar tweeted: “A miracle? With opposition hands tied, accounts frozen, incumbent disqualified, (Election Commission) chief a political appointee, government machinery at Harapan’s disposal, and ‘political donations’ by the millions… no way (will it be) a miracle, Lim, but it is going to be a daylight robbery!” Discerning Malaysians can see through the hollowness of Annuar’s arguments, but this was as good as a confession that UMNO and Barisan Nasional had been committing “daylight robberies” in the last few decades to overstay in power – as evident by the fact that in the 2013 General Election, UMNO/BN won only 47.3% of the popular vote but secured 60% of the parliamentary seats.

    May be, Annuar should be reminded as to why we are having a by-election in Cameron Highlands on January 26 – that the Barisan Nasional’s victory for the parliamentary constituency of Cameron Highlands in the 14th General Election was declared null and void by the Election Court which found that corrupt practices had been committed to induce voters to vote for Barisan Nasional! Election Judge Datuk Azizah Nawawi had held that corrupt practices had been proven to have been committed with the knowledge and consent of the Cameron Highlands MP Datuk C. Sivarraajh, namely giving of money to voters to induce them to vote for BN. She said: “I am of the considered opinion that the petitioner has established beyond reasonable doubt that bribery was proven, in that money was given to voters either directly by the respondent or indirectly through Datuk Seri Wan Rosdy Wan Ismail (Jelai Assemblyman) or Achom (an Orang Asli who acted as an agent for Wan Rosdy) and that the money was given to the voters to induce them to vote (for BN).”

    What is most incriminating is Sivarraajh’s failure to appeal against the Election Court’s decision despite his announcement that he would be appealing against the decision. Under the circumstances, would Annuar agree that both Sivarraajh and Assemblyman for Jelai, Datuk Seri Wan Rosdy Wan Ismail, who is the Pahang Mentri Besar, should be asked to say away from the Cameron Highlands by-election as both of them have been named as involved in corrupt practice and money politics in the 14th General Election? Finally, I want to warn all DAP/Pakatan Harapan by-election workers not to be bamboozled by Annuar’s outburst, and never to take things for granted as Cameron Highlands is one of the most invincible UMNO/BN parliamentary constituencies in the country. The 14th General Election result on May 9, 2018 toppling the Najib government was as good as a political “miracle” which I had not expected. Dr. Mahathir Mohamad had said he had not anticipated it either. But Datuk Seri Najib Razak was very sure of winning, even recapturing two-thirds parliamentary majority in the 14th General Election.

    Let the voters of Cameron Highlands produce an election “miracle” on January 26 by ensuring a victory for the DAP/Pakatan Harapan candidate!

  • UMNO Supreme Council should take responsibility to clear up the financial mess in Utusan Malaysia, says Kit Siang

    UMNO Supreme Council should take responsibility to clear up the financial mess in Utusan Malaysia, says Kit Siang

    UMNO Supreme Council should take responsibility to clear up the financial mess in Utusan Malaysia and not make the Utusan journalists scapegoats of UMNO kleptocracy and incompetence. The UMNO Supreme Council must take responsibility and clear up the financial mess in Utusan Malaysia and not make the Utusan Malaysia journalists as scapegoats of Umno kleptocracy and incompetence. The Utusan Melayu Bhd staff have urged Abdul Aziz Sheikh Fadzir to return as executive chairman so that he can complete the task of turning the company – which is in a financial mess – around, as Aziz was fully aware of the company’s situation, having put in place a rescue plan for Utusan last June.

    Nobody knows whether Aziz’s return to Utusan Malaysia would turn the newspaper around, but I fully agree with the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) secretary Basir Abu Bakar, who is also an Utusan reporter, that whoever helms the company must be committed to saving Utusan. I will go one step further and state that the UMNO Supreme Council must not be allowed to run away from its responsibility to the Utusan Malaysia journalists, including those who have recently left, as UMNO’s fall from power in Putrajaya in the 14th General Election on May 9, 2018 cannot and must not be used as an excuse to dismiss the Utusan Malaysia journalists – unless UMNO is going to dissolve itself! In this connection, I fully endorse the call of Gerakan Media Merdeka (Geramm) to the Utusan Malaysia management to take swift actions to resolve its outstanding issues with Utusan as it is unfair for Utusan Malaysia’s management to sideline the rights of their former workers who for many years had contributed to the company and made a sacrifice in order to keep the country’s oldest Malay newspaper afloat.

  • We are in the era of “miracles” with the historic decision of May 9, 2018

    We are in the era of “miracles” with the historic decision of May 9, 2018

    DAP and Pakatan Harapan will be the underdog in the Cameron Highlands by-election on January 26, 2019 and it will be a miracle if DAP/Pakatan Harapan can win but we are in the era of “miracles” with the historic decision of May 9, 2018 so we must dare to dream and work for of another miracle next month. The very fact that we are gathered here in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama, Pos Lenjang, which is not planned as all of us should be in different places at this time whether in Bentong, Kuala Lumpur or Petaling Jaya to ring in the 2019 New Year in New Year Eve celebrations is probably Almighty’s unfathomable ways of highlighting the plight of the Orang Asli in Malaysia sixty years after Merdeka.

    It is no exaggeration to say that the Orang Asli community, the first inhabitants in the country, have become the most neglected community in the country after six decades of nation-building and it is time that all Malaysians from all communities and religions should unite as one powerful force to uplift and catapult the Orang Asli community into the 21st century and wipe out this shame and blot on Malaysia’s development history. We are in the age of Internet where information travels at the speed of light – but from here, we are completely cut off from the outside world, as we cannot communicate with anyone outside this kampong. I hope we can leave tomorrow, which means we will spend a night here, but the Semais live here for generations in this condition. The Semais are cut off from the outside world, where they cannot get access to the most basic necessities which they are entitled to as citizens of Malaysia, whether in medical aid, educational and economic opportunities, basic infrastructure facilities of clean water and electricity, and most important of all to them, land rights.

    This is indeed a great shame for Malaysia which boasts as a modern developed country – and we should all support an Uplift Orang Asli blueprint which will catapult the Orang Asli communities from the stone age into the modern information era. I want to thank in particular Jimmy Wong, Lee Khai Meng and Tam Kar Lye and the Unit Tindak Team for this trip to Pos Menson, Pos Betau, Pos Sinderut, Pos Lenjang and Pos Titom and the opportunity to visit some ten Orang Asli kampongs in the area. Crossing the Sungai Jelai river at Kampung Simoi Lama by driving through it, despite its strong current, to reach orang asli villages in Pos Lenjang and Pos Titom will always be a highlight of this trip, as Jimmy had half-jokingly said when we were crossing the river that if we lost control and were swept away by the current, we would end up in Lipis. New Year’s Eve here in Kampong Orang Asli Simoi Lama is special, not only because it is unplanned by man and we are in a place where time seems to have stood still, as it provides an occasion to reflect on the larger questions of the meaning of life and about the tectonic changes that have taken place not only in Malaysia but to the human race outside Kampong Simoi Lama.

    Although we are a small group here tonight, we have Chinese, Malays, Indians and Orang Asli. We have Muslims, Buddhists, Christians, Hindus and animists. We are a microcosm for multi-racial, multi-religious and multi-cultural Malaysia. Malaysia’s future lies in breaking away from the vicious and toxic politics of racial and religious polarisation, using lies, hate and fear to divide Malaysians, which is the great threat to modern Malaysia. I am the most demonised politician in the country for the last half a century, variously defamed as anti-Malay, anti-Islam, anti-Indian, anti-Chinese-educated Chinese, anti-English-educated Chinese; cause of May 13, 1969 riots in Malaysia as leader of illegal and anti-Malay processions in the streets of Kuala Lumpur when I was never in Kuala Lumpur; a communist, a relative of Chin Peng; a quadruple secret agent serving the CIA, KGB, M16 and the Australian Secret Service; a multi-billionaire who had received RM1 billion each from Dr. Mahahir Mohamad and the Israelis.

    Previously alleged that I would be Prime Minister if Pakatan Harapan wins the 14th General Election; now accused of being the “real power” in the Pakatan Harapan government in Putrajaya with Mahathir, Anwar, Azizah, Azmin, Mat Sabu as my puppets under my thumb, and a long list of other wild and bizarre allegations. In my life, I have never said or done a single thing which could be construed as anti-Malay or anti-Islam as Malaysia can only be a top world-class nation if we leverage on the assets and best qualities of the diverse races, religions and civilisations which meet in confluence in Malaysia to build a new civilisation for the world. This cannot be achieved by being anti any race, religion, culture or civilisation in Malaysia, but only through an inclusive approach which adopts the best from the different races, religions, cultures and civilisations which meet in Malaysia to build a new civilisation for the world.

    DAP has been accused of being anti-Malay and anti-Islam, which is completely baseless as DAP was founded 53 years ago to be a party not for anyone race or any one religion but for all Malaysians, whether they are Chinese, Malays, Indians, Kadazans, Ibans or Orang Asli, whether they are Muslims, Buddhists, Christians, Hindus or Sikhs. I have never been anti-Malay or anti-Islam. In fact, I have a sister before I was born who was given away to a Malay family in Batu Pahat. I do not know whether she is still alive but it will be great if she is still alive and to be able to meet her. For the immediate present, we are confronted with the challenge of the Cameron Highlands by-election, as the dates for the nomination on 12th January and polling on 26th January had been announced by the Election Commission. Cameron Highlands had always been one of the “fixed deposit” parliamentary seats of the Barisan Nasional in the past six decades.

    We had won the majority support of the Chinese and Indian voters in the 14th General Election but secured only minority support from the Malay and Orang Asli voters. The Pakatan Harapan’s challenge in the Cameron Highlands by-election is to maintain the support of the Chinese and Indians voters on the one hand, while increasing the support of the Malay and Orang Asli voters until we could cross the majority mark by one or both of these two groups. If we can do this, then the DAP/Pakatan Harapan by-election workers in the Cameron Highlands will be “miracle-workers”! Let the DAP/Pakatan Harapan “miracle-workers” get to work!

  • Time for the Orang Asli community to “come in from the cold”

    Time for the Orang Asli community to “come in from the cold”

    Time for the Orang Asli community to “come in from the cold” and take their place in the national mainstream of Malaysian development and stop being the forgotten or downtrodden community. I am glad to be back to Pos Sinderut after my first visit five months ago in July 2018 with the M. Manogaran, the Pakatan Harapan candidate for Cameron Highlands parliamentary constituency. I have with me the Deputy Minister for Water, Land and Natural Resources, Tengku Zulpuri Shah Raja Puri, MP for Bentong Wong Tack and Pahang State Assemblyman for Tanah Rata Chiong Yoke Kong and State Assemblyman for Tras Chow Yu Hui.

    When I first visited Pos Sinderut, Manogaran was in the thick of the historic election petition to nullify the outcome of the 14th General Election result for Cameron Highlands because of vote-buying, money politics and threatening of voters in the Barisan Nasional election compaign which resulted in the election of C Sivaraajh of MIC. Manogaran lost Cameron Highlands in the 14th General Election by just 597 votes in the 14th General Election on May 9, 2018. As I mentioned in July, Cameron Highlands is the parliamentary constituency with the largest percentage of Orang Asli voters, constituting over 20 per cent of the electorate – even more than the number of Indian voters, although less than the Malay and Chinese voters. The next parliamentary constituencies with the largest number of Orang Asli voters are Tapah and Gua Musang.

    The Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands have made history, not only for themselves, the Orang Asli community, but for all 32 million Malaysians and struck a major blow against the kleptocratic culture which the Pakatan Harapan coalition of DAP, PKR, Bersatu and AMANAH have pledged to eradicate. But this is not enough. In the Cameron Highlands by-election for which Nomination on January 12 and Polling on January 26 had been announced by the Election Commission, the Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands are set to make an even greater history for themselves, the Orang Asli in Malaysia and Malaysia as a whole. It is time for the Orang Asli, who are the first inhabitants of this country, to “come in from the cold” and take their place in the national mainstream of Malaysian development to demand justice, freedom, integrity and democracy.

    For six decades, the UMNO and Barisan Nasional government had failed the Orang Asli communities, for they are left far behind in the mainstream of national development, remaining forgotten and downtrodden after more than six decades of Merdeka. I received an education on corruption during my dialogue with the Orang Aslis in Pos Sinduret from 14 villages in Sinderut as well as Pos Manson when I visited the area in July, for it was then that I first heard of “roti canai” roads, i.e. substandard roads because of poor workmanship and corruption as the new roads rapidly deteriorate as there was only a thin film of cement on top to hide the shoddy work. There must be no more “roti canai” roads in Cameron Highlands or anywhere else under a New Malaysia which is being built by Pakatan Harapan after the 14th General Election.

    After six decades of nation-building, the Orang Aslis should cease to be a neglected and forgotten community in Malaysia. What all Orang Asli communities throughout Malaysia are proper roads, water and electricity, schools and easy access to medical care, housing as well as decent jobs and protection of their customary land rights. The Orang Aslis are no more the unthinking “fixed deposits” for UMNO/Barisan Nasional in elections and they should stand up like the Malays, Chinese, Indians, Kadazans and Ibans have done in the 14th General Election, to demand a New Malaysia of Justice, Integrity, Freedom and Democracy for their children and children’s children. I am proud that at the launch of the Pakatan Harapan Cameron Highlands by-election ops centre in Pos Senderut today.

    We have with us six of the score of Orang Asli witnesses who bravely testified about electoral offences of bribery and money politics in Kuala Lumpur Court in the successful Cameron Highlands election court battle. They are not only the heroes of Orang Asli communities in Malaysia, they are in fact Malaysian heroes for they play a significant and historic role to repudiate Malaysia’s ill-fame as a global kleptocracy and to establish it as a clean and incorruptible country where there is electoral integrity and rule of law. I had suggested when launching the Pakaran Harapan Cameron Highlands by-election ops centre at Pos Betau earlier today the holding of a National Orang Asli Conference in Cameron Highlands next month to discuss and formulate a blueprint for Orang Asli upliftment in the New Malaysia of Pakatan Harapan.

    If such a National Orang Asli Conference could be held in Cameron Highlands next month, it would also be a most appropriate occasion to honour the score of Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands who had bravely stood up for the country by being witnesses of truth, justice and democracy to speak up against bribery, money-politics and voter-threatening in the Cameron Highlands election case.

  • Kit Siang : My first experience which illustrates the failures of BN policies on upliftment of Orang Asli in last six decade

    Kit Siang : My first experience which illustrates the failures of BN policies on upliftment of Orang Asli in last six decade

    Trapped at Kampong Orang Asli Semoi Lama on New Year’s Eve together with MP for Bentong Wong Tack, State Assemblyman for Tanah Rata Chiong Yoke Kong, former PH Candidate for Cameron Highlands M. Manogaram, cutting from all access to the outside world, is my first experience which illustrates the failures of BN policies on upliftment of Orang Asli in last six decade. I have just come out from my visits to the Orang Asli settlements in Cameron Highlands since Saturday.

    My visit, which was planned to end yesterday, could not go as planned as together with Pakatan Harapan MP for Bentong Wong Tack, PH Pahang State Assemblyman for Tanah Rata Chiong Yoke Kong, and former PH Candidate for Cameron Highlands M. Manogaram, and a convey of 12 vehicles, I was trapped to spend 2019 New Year’s Eve at Kampong Orang Asli Semoi Lama, cut off from all access to the outside world. This was my first experience in 77 years at being trapped at a place, cut off from all access to the outside world, which is particularly poignant in an age of instant communications where information travels at the speed of light. Having to cross the river at Kampong Semoi Lama by driving through it despite its strong currents to reach Orang Asli kampongs in Pos Lenyang and Pos Titom is also an unforgettable experience.

    These unanticipated experiences are most invaluable one, as they illustrate vividly the failures of the UMNO/Barisan Nasional government in the upliftment of the Orang Asli people, the first inhabitants in the country, after six decades of federal responsibility. It is a symbol that after six decades, the majority of Orang Asli communities are still cut off from the outside world when they should have already been brought into the mainstream of national development. My being trapped with Bentong MP, Tanah Rata Assemblyman, the former Pakatan Harapan candidate for Cameron Highlands, and a convoy of 12 vehicles, at Kampong Orang Asli Semoi Lama should bring the shocking plight and position of the Orang Ali after six decades of nation-building to the forefront of the Cameron Highlands by-election campaign, as it is time to wipe out Orang Asli poverty, backwardness and isolation after six decades of nation-building.

    In the Cameron Highlands election in the 14th General Election, some 80% of the Orang Asli voters voted for the MIC/BN candidate and 20% of the Orang Asli votes for Manogaran and Pakatan Harapan. The time has come for “Reformasi Orang Asli”, and we should aim to reverse the voting trend whereby in the by-election we can get some 80% of the Orang Asli voters to vote for Pakatan Harapan with only 20% going to Barisan Nasional. Can this be done? If this historic result could be produced during the Cameron Highlands by-election, it will mean that at last the Orang Asli in Malaysia have stood up for their rights as full citizens in Malaysia, with all this means in politics, economics, education, health-care, job opportunities, housing and land. This is why I have proposed the holding of a National Orang Asli Conference in Cameron Highlands this month to discuss and formulate a blueprint for Orang Asli upliftment in the New Malaysia of Pakatan Harapan.

    If such a National Orang Asli Conference could be held in Cameron Highlands, it would also mean that the Orang Asli in Cameron Highlands who had bravely stood up for the country by being witnesses of truth, justice and democracy against bribery, money-politics and voter-threats in the Cameron Highlands election case, will again create history by spearheading a Reformasi Orang Asli in Malaysia.