I will contest DAP polls, prepared for defeat
MP SPEAKS | I will contest the DAP central executive committee election in June and am prepared to be defeated in a party election, where I have given over 55 years of my life in pursuit of the Malaysian dream. I am not aiming for any frontline leadership position.
I want to reiterate that DAP does not advocate any de-Chinese, de-Malay, de-Indian, de-Kadazan or de-Iban policy. We stand for the very opposite, as we want Malaysians to accept that Malaysians will have multiple identities – ethnic, religious, linguistic, cultural, regional - but first and foremost that they are all Malaysians.
I want to thank KY Chan and Tony Pua, the DAP MP for Damansara, for this idea of Theatre Impian, which they had worked for over two years as a labour of love, solidarity, idealism and patriotism, but they had kept me in the dark until last month, just before the launching of Theatre Impian.
Theatre Impian captured the substance of what we had fought for over half a century, in pursuit of the Malaysian dream for all Malaysians regardless of race, language, religion or region to be united to make Malaysia a world-class great nation.
There are many forces in the country that want to see me crushed and obliterated and the Malaysian dream defeated.
I have said in my 55 years of political struggle that I was born, grew up and will die in Malaysia. I never expected to be an octogenarian. But one thing is sure, I will die in Malaysia and not in any other land.
Last month, there was the Alaska Summit and historic clash between China and the United States, and there were many reports about the Chinese Diaspora – one of the biggest diasporic populations in the world numbering over 70 million people of diverse backgrounds.
The Malaysian Chinese, however, do not belong to the Chinese Diaspora as they are part of the Malaysian Diaspora - comprising not only Chinese but also Malays, Indians, Kadazans and Ibans.
I have visited many countries, including several trips to China, but I never felt home except when I was on Malaysian soil.
I want the Malaysian Chinese, like other Malaysians, whatever their race, religion, language, culture or region, to be treated as first-class Malaysians. This is the only way to realise the Malaysian dream.
I want all Malaysians to be able to fulfil their potential in Malaysia and do not have to migrate to other lands to do so, whether United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Canada or the United States, to help make these nations great.
I want them to stay in Malaysia to make Malaysia world-class great!
I visited Sekinchan four days ago on Sunday.
Five years ago, on June 18, 2016, Pakatan Harapan lost badly in two parliamentary by-elections – one in Sungai Besar and the other in Kuala Kangsar.
The Pakatan Harapan candidate in Sungai Besar by-election, Azhar Abdul Shukor of Amanah lost by a majority of 9,191 votes while in Kuala Kangsar, Ahmad Termizi Ramli of Amanah lost by a majority of 6,969 votes.
There were gloom and doom about prospects of political change for the 14th general election which at the time had to be held by May 2018.
In fact, the ruling administration was so emboldened by the victories in the two parliamentary by-elections that it took several new measures in the following two weeks after the by-elections to strengthen itself, including the sacking of Muhyiddin Yassin and Mukhriz Mahathir from Umno and the suspension of Shafie Apdal as an Umno member; a major purge in the MACC involving the two top men in the agency; and the arrest on two trumped-up charges of corruption against the DAP secretary-general and then Penang chief minister Lim Guan Eng.
In the Sungai Besar parliamentary by-election, DAP even lost in the Sekinchan state assembly seat held by the present Selangor speaker Ng Suee Lin who had won it for three terms – the first time with a wafer-thin majority of 344 votes in the 2004 general election, the second time with an even smaller majority of 190 votes in the 2008 general election, the third time with a comfortable majority of 2,239 votes in the 2013 general election.
But in less than two years in the 14th general election on May 9, 2018, we converted the gloom and doom of June 2016 into a high watermark for political change in Malaysia when we shocked Malaysians and the world with the first peaceful and democratic transition of power in six decades of Malaysian nationhood.
We are now in that political nadir as in June 2016, with Malaysians disillusioned and disappointed about the political process, with despondency and hopelessness pervading the land.
The high hopes and expectations of the 14th general election to restore Malaysia as a world-class great nation - in the words of Bapa Malaysia Tunku Abdul Rahman to be “a beacon of light in a difficult and distracted world” - had not been fulfilled.
Instead of five years of institutional reforms and political, economic, social and educational changes to strongly anchor Malaysia as a world-class great nation, the Harapan government was toppled by the Sheraton Move conspiracy after 22 months, ushering in a backdoor, undemocratic and illegitimate government which suspended Parliament as it was unsure that it could continue to command the support of the majority of MPs in Parliament.
Can we rekindle, re-inspire, re-energise and re-motivate hope and inspiration in the Malaysian dream for the country to be a world-class great nation by ensuring that the 15th general election can fulfil the high but dashed hopes of the previous one for reform and salvation?
I say yes. We can. We have done it before. The darkest hour is just before dawn. All we need are conviction, stamina, commitment and perseverance to pursue the Malaysian dream.
I have said that we must learn the lessons of the 22-month Harapan government.
One important lesson is to be more conscious of the power of lies, fake news and false information in the Internet era of social media which can create a “new reality” that is completely opposite to the truth and facts.
For instance, many still believe that I had said that one must learn Jawi to be a Malaysian, which is a lie, and that Guan Eng had declared he was not Chinese when he was appointed finance minister.
Or the lies that Harapan had arrested 12 people for alleged involvement with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), or refused to recognise the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC).
I had told two of our assemblypersons, P Gunasekaran from Negeri Sembilan and G Samninathan from Malacca, that it was DAP’s efforts in government that led to their release at the end of February 2020, or they would be detained for a long time if they were not freed before the Sheraton Move.
On the UEC certificate, this is what the Buku Harapan says: “Harapan will undertake to recognise UEC certificates to enter public institutions of higher learning (IPTA) provided that applicants have a credit in Bahasa Melayu at the SPM level. For this purpose, the UEC certificate will be assessed to be equivalent to the existing general qualification for entry into IPTA.”
At a DAP retreat in 2019, the then prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad said the Harapan government was committed to the pledge to recognise the UEC certificate to enter public institutions of learning after an assessment.
But the Harapan government did not have five years to fulfil its election pledge as it was toppled after 22 months.
There are those who advocate a return to the past, when the DAP was in the opposition.
One of the lessons of the Harapan administration is that it is in government that one can get things done.
We must aim to return to power in the 15th general election, and I urge all Malaysians to give full support to Harapan and the coalition's prime minister-designate, Anwar Ibrahim.
The Malaysian dream movement must continue, based on the principle that power must be used to unite Malaysians to ensure that their common interest of having a better life.
This is in terms of economy and jobs, education, housing, health, transport, environment, respect for religious and cultural diversity, parliamentary democracy, the rule of law, separation of powers, good governance, public integrity, press freedom, human rights, can be met to be a world-class great nation. We must reject the thesis of “power for power’s sake”. - Mkini
LIM KIT SIANG is DAP MP for Iskandar Puteri.
The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of MMKtT.
✍ Credit given to the original owner of this post : ☕ Malaysians Must Know the TRUTH
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