ADOPTION.....
Najib said people have taken the country’s adoption of the Chinese education
system for granted.
By : ZURAIRI AR
KUALA LUMPUR : The Chinese
community should embrace Bahasa Malaysia as it is the country’s national
language, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said this morning.
Speaking on Mandarin radio
channel Melody FM, Najib also reassured listeners that Chinese education will
be part of the exercise to improve quality of education under the National
Education Blueprint.
Responding to demands by
pressure group Dong Zong, the United Chinese School Committees Association, the
premier reminded listeners that Malaysia has always recognised Chinese schools.
“We are the only country
outside China which has got Chinese education as part of the national system,”
he remarked.
“The people have taken this
for granted.”
He also revealed that the
Cabinet is looking into implementing an eight-point plan to address the
shortage of teachers for Chinese vernacular schools, drawn from roundtable
meetings involving various stakeholders including Dong Zong.
The implementation will be
overseen by one of the two deputy ministers from the Education Ministry.
In March, Deputy Education
Minister Dr Puad Zarkashi had branded Chinese educationists “racist” for
demanding that only qualified Mandarin-speaking teachers be allowed to teach in
Chinese vernacular schools.
The group accused the
Education Ministry earlier this year of “deliberately” creating a dearth of
trained Mandarin-speaking teachers as part of a larger conspiracy to
re-engineer the identities of vernacular schools.
Dong Zong had last month
submitted a memorandum on the matter to the prime minister.
Minister in Prime Minister’s
Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz later stated that the demands were reasonable,
but this view was dismissed by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin
as “a personal one”.
In today’s talk show, Najib
also revealed that the neighbourhood night patrols announced in Budget 2013
will be launched early this December.
Replying to a caller, the
prime minister clarified that 1,000 police officers on motorcycles will be
patrolling in pairs in select neighbourhoods, and that RM20 million was
allocated for the programme.
During the #TanyaNajib event
on YouTube earlier this month, Najib also told viewers that he was excited for
the crime-fighting initiative as it was his idea.
Later in the radio
programme, Najib, who is also finance minister, reiterated that only 1.7
million Malaysians out of 12 million workers were paying income tax.
In Budget 2013, Najib
announced a 1 per cent tax cut for workers with taxable incomes of between
RM2,500 and RM50,000. Analysts see the move as paving the way for the goods and
services tax (GST) that the Najib administration has been weighing but was
forced to delay due to fears of voter backlash.
Najib also insisted that
middle class Malaysians do reap indirect benefits from government policies,
through subsidies such as for RON95 petrol.
“Although we pay slightly
more (for car purchases) initially, but because of the large amount of
subsidies, you end up paying much less than your counterpart after five years
of use,” he said. (TMI)
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