By : M KRISHNAMOORTHY
FORMER Prime Minister Dr
Mahathir Mohamad must remember that his father was an immigrant from Kerala and
was given citizenship together with Indians, Indian Muslims, Chinese and others
because of the fair and just gesture by Tunku Abdul Rahman and the Reid
Commission.
Thanks to the Commission and
Tunku, Mahathir is a citizen of Malaya then, and now Malaysia.
Yesterday, Mahathir
suggested that a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) be set up to investigate the
granting of citizenship to one million foreign immigrants in the Federation of
Malaya, before Malaysia gained independence.
The Reid Commission was
entrusted with drafting the constitution after taking into account the views of
different groups. The tripartite working party, which included representatives
from the Alliance, the Malay rulers and the British, met between February 22
and April 27, 1957 to go through each item in the draft constitution.
This was to ensure that the
new constitution would be acceptable to the major communities. Some significant
amendments were made at this final stage although the general structure of the
draft constitution was retained, according to the Centre for Policy Initiatives
(CPI), a think tank group.
“Articles in the
constitution on citizenship, Malay special position, language, and religion
were the most sensitive and were closely scrutinised and debated. Throughout
these discussions, UMNO and the non-Malay Alliance leaders had to contend with
very communal demands from radical sections of their communities. Over the
years since then, these Articles in the constitution have continued to be major
sources of disagreement and a bone of contention in inter-ethnic relations.
Members of the Alliance
agreed on the application of jus soli for citizenship so that those born in the
federation after independence became citizens and non-residents could qualify
by fulfilling residence, language and oath of loyalty requirements. This
liberal citizenship requirement was a major concession from the Malays because
with this agreement, a large number of non-Malays became citizens.
“The Alliance, which
insisted on a single nationality, also eventually accepted the Reid
Commission’s inclusion of modified dual-citizenship especially for those from
the Straits Settlements who were British subjects.
“In exchange for
liberalising citizenship requirements, non-Malay leaders in the Alliance
accepted the special position of the Malays. UMNO wanted to continue with Malay
privileges as provided under the Federation of Malaya Agreement through
provisions for Malay reservation land, operation of quotas within the public
services, quotas for licences and permits for certain businesses, and quotas
for public scholarship and education grants,” the CPI noted in its research.
Quid Pro Quo Agreement
Together with this, Mahathir
must recall vividly that the Malayan founding fathers agreed to a “social
contract” on a quid pro quo agreement. It is a give and take agreement that
provides Chinese and Indians citizenship by Tunku Abdul Rahman. It was done in
return for the non-Malays granting special privileges to the Malays and
indigenous people (bumiputra or sons of sons of the soil) of Malaya.
A higher education Malaysian
studies textbook conforming to the government syllabus states, according
states: “Since the Malay leaders agreed to relax the conditions for
citizenship, the leaders of the Chinese and Indian communities accepted the
special position of the Malays as indigenous people of Malaya.”
Another description of the
social contract declares it to be an agreement that “Malay entitlement to
political and administrative authority should be accepted unchallenged, at
least for the time being, in return for non-interference in Chinese control of
the economy”.
Therefore, the constitution
granted the bumiputra reservations of land, quotas in the civil service, public
scholarships and public education, quotas for trade licences, and the
permission to monopolise certain industries if the government permits.
“Tunku never gave out
citizenship to subvert the electoral process but to ensure that in the run-up
to Merdeka in 1957, non-Malays who resided in Malaya had a right to
citizenship, which was agreed to by all including the Conference of Rulers -
all done in an open and transparent manner,” said DAP party Supremo Lim Kit
Siang.
Whereas, he added that
Mahathir conducted the Project IC or Project M in secrecy unlike Tunku, who
followed the Reid Commission’s findings and accepted its recommendations in an
open and transparent process.
Mahathir added: “We should
look back and remember, Tunku Abdul Rahman was worse than I. He gave out a
million citizenships to those who were not qualified (to receive it).”
Consultation Process
In March 1956 a commission
chaired by Lord Reid was set up to formulate a draft and refine the
constitution of the Federation of Malaya. The commission sought the views of
political parties, non-political organisations and individuals on the form of
government and racial structure appropriate for this country. In the
consultation process, a memorandum from the Alliance had gained precedence.
The memorandum, an
inter-communal conciliation aimed at mutual interests and strengthening the
nation’s democratic system of government, took into account five main factors
namely the position of the Malay Rulers, Islam as the official religion of the
federation, position of the Malay language, the special positions of the Malays
and equal citizenship. (MKINI)
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