By : TOMMYTHOMAS
THE WIDESPREAD publicity
given to the recent statements made by former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir
Mohamad that: Immigrants from the Philippines were given citizenship in Sabah
in the 1990s during his administration; they were lawfully done; and former
Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman "had done worse" by giving
citizenship to "one million unqualified people" in Peninsular
Malaysia, lamenting that no one had made it an issue;
The above have to be
rebutted and the record put straight. The "sincerity" of his
admissions, coming in the wake of evidence at the Royal Commission currently
inquiring on the origins and consequences of immigration into Sabah, must be
questioned.
Like disgraced cyclist Lance
Armstrong, Mahathir only came clean after years of denial when he had
absolutely no choice because of the overwhelming evidence being publicly
uncovered.
When the truth finally
emerged, Mahathir made his admissions. And like Armstrong, it was selective,
self-serving and without any contrition. But worse than Armstrong, he blamed
others.
To put it plainly, there is
no parallel between these two episodes in the nation's history.
Malaya in 1957
Under the Federation of
Malaya Agreement of 1948, Malays automatically became federal citizens, while
non-Malays acquired citizenship by fulfilling residential qualifications.
In 1953, out of the total
population of Malaya of 5.7 million, some 1.3 million (nearly all of whom were
non-Malays) were not citizens. Thus, for the non-Malays, ‘citizenship' based on
the doctrine of jus soli was a critical matter.
Large scale immigration into
Malaya first occurred in the Malacca Sultanate in the 15th century. Trade
brought Arab, Chinese and Indian immigrants, and they formed distinct
settlements in Malacca. Thus, immigration pre-dated the first European colonial
conquest, by the Portuguese in 1511.
Major waves of immigration
occurred after direct British intervention in Perak under the Pangkor Treaty of
1874.
When the British very
reluctantly accepted, by about 1955, that independence had to be granted to
Malaya, lengthy negotiations began between the British government, the Malay
rulers and the Alliance coalition led by Tunku Abdul Rahman.
The Reid Commission of
eminent jurists was appointed to draft a constitution. Its report, published in
February 1957, was the subject of intense debate. Working groups were set up to
study the Reid Report. The London Conference of May 1957 followed. The British
government issued a White Paper in June 1957.
The final steps were the
presentation of the Constitutional Bill in the British Parliament and in the
Federal Legislative Council in Kuala Lumpur.
Merdeka was proclaimed on
Aug 31, 1957, with Tunku reading the Proclamation of Independence.
The issue of citizenship to
non-Malays in 1957 cannot therefore be seen in isolation or in a vacuum.
Instead, it was the result of a ‘give-and-take' bargain among the various
communities reached through consensus.
The bargain was certainly
not through the effort of Tunku alone, although he was the dominant
personality. The other founding fathers, Abdul Razak Hussein, Ismail Abdul
Rahman, Tan Cheng Lock and VT Sambanthan, also played important roles.
Subsequent commentators have
described the Merdeka bargain as the ‘social contract'. Thus, the social
contract reached by the three communities under the watchful eye of the British
imperial power prior to Merdeka was, in essence, a bargain whereby in exchange
for a place under the Malayan sun with full citizenship, a right to use their
language and observe their religion, the non-Malays had to concede special
privileges to the Malays to assist the latter to ascend the economic ladder.
It was a quid pro quo. In
this equilibrium, the non-Malays were not to be relegated to second-class
citizens: citizenship was not on a two-tier basis and there was going to be no
apartheid, partition or repatriation.
What was required from the
non-Malays at the time of Merdeka was undivided loyalty to the new nation.
Racial differences were
recognised. Diversity was encouraged. There was no pressure to integrate into
one Malayan race. Assimilation was out of the question. Thus, a united Malayan
nation did not involve the sacrifice by any community of its culture or
customs. Malaya was always to remain a plural society.
Sabah in the 1990s
What happened in Sabah when
Mahathir was Prime Minister was entirely different. TheThe Politics of Make
Belief decision to give Malaysian citizenship liberally and generously to
nationals of Philippines and other countries was done secretly, with the sole
purpose of securing and maintaining political power in Sabah.
It was naked, partisan
politics to give electoral advantage to one party that underpinned the
decision. When confronted, denials were made. Only when it became a major
electoral issue in Sabah in the forthcoming general and state elections this
year, did the present government, much to the unhappiness of Mahathir, appoint
a Royal Commission.
And only when the truth
emerged during its hearing, did Mahathir admit his role.To compare the Sabah
episode with the gaining of nationhood in 1957 is not just historical revision.
It is also not merely being economical with the truth. Rather, it is a blatant
fabrication of facts.
Not only does it insult the
roles played by our founding fathers in securing Merdeka from the British, it
adds injury to millions of Malaysians whose parents or grandparents became
citizens through this open, transparent and legal manner.
It must be remembered that
no such citizenship issue arose when Sabah (North Borneo) joined Malaysia in
1963. Indeed, the Philippine government opposed the formation of Malaysia.
Their nationals only became
Malaysian citizens in the mid-1990s, some 30 years after Sabah's independence
from the British. Finally, citizenship is a federal matter, and very much
within the power and discretion of the Home Minister. Accordingly, the two
exercises of granting citizenship cannot be treated in a similar fashion.
(MKINI)
(NOTES : TOMMY THOMAS
specialises in constitutional law. He conducted substantial research in the
events leading up to Merdeka in the course of preparing two papers presented at
the Malaysian Law Conferences in 2005 and 2007, subsequently published as ‘Is
Malaysia an Islamic State?' and ‘The Social Contract: Malaysia's Constitutional
Covenant' in [2006] 4 MLJ xv and [2008] 1 MLJ cxxxii)
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