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霹雳民主行动党活动

Monday, November 27, 2006

Perak DAP State Annual Convention(1)



Speech By DAP Secretary-General Lim Guan Eng During The Perak DAP State Annual Convention In Excelsior Hotel, Ipoh On 26.11.2006
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

Restoring Bangsa Malaysia As Part Of National Policy

In the UMNO General Assembly, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s policy speech “Fulfilling Promises” was not the most important speech because he failed to fulfill promises did not perform well even in his self-designed own report card. The most important speech was made by Deputy UMNO President Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak in his winding up on 17 November 2006 when he said that “Bangsa Malaysia” was not part of national policy but only a general concept. This is a complete reversal of previous BN policy of creating a national Malaysian race that can over-ride race and religion in the path towards national unity.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi would only just pass his own self-desinged report card by garnering a 42% score as he has only made progress in 5 out of his 12 pillars of good governance. (40% is now the passing mark in schools as compared to 50% during our time)

Abdullah's 12 pillars of good governance are:-
1. Effective leadership is respected leadership.
2. Democracy flourishes through collective responsibility.
3. Development of human capital via quality holistic education programmes.
4. Ensure economic growth by exploring new sources while focusing on rural development and modernization of agriculture.
5. Develop a bumiputera commercial and industrial community, and a bumiputera science and technology community.
6. Acknowledging the role of the private sector to generate economic growth, particularly in creating new economic opportunities.
7. To enhance public sector performance, in particular, improving public delivery systems, and facilitate the role of the private sector.
8. Addressing corruption by emphasizing on both preventive and punitive approaches.
9. Enforcing the rule of law in a firm and transparent manner, particularly in the fight against crime.
10. Encouraging a more equitable and active participation of youth and the emancipation of women.
11. Defending Malaysia's sovereignity.
12. Strengthening national unity.

Of the 12 pillars, Abdullah can only claim progress in 5 pillars namely, rural development and agriculture(No. 4), bumiputera development(No. 5), acknowledging the role of private sector(No. 6), youth and women(No. 10), and defending Malaysia’s sovereignty(No. 11). As for the remaining 7 pillars, either no progress has been made or Malaysia has backslided in becoming worse off.

How can there be effective leadership when his predecessor who appointed him has declared open war against Abdullah barely 2 years after Abdullah took over as Prime Minister? Where are the improvements in democracy when oppressive laws such as as Printing Presses & Publications Act(PPPA), Sedition Act(SA), Internal Security Act(ISA) and Official Secrets Act(OSA) are still retained and applied indiscriminately and arbitrarily.

Corruption is now worse off than when Tun Dr Mahathir retired in 2003, Malaysia was ranked No. 37 under the Transparency International’s(TI) Corruption Perception Index.but now is ranked No. 44. The latest RM 600 million rural development fund announced by Abdullah is given exclusively to the UMNO Division heads of RM 3 million each. Human capital development still takes a back seat to racial quotas and anti-competitive policies.

Public sector performance, especially in delivery system is poor with the litany of abuses of powers, non-performance or delays in implementation of development projects by civil servants resulting in higher costs or abandoned projects. Even enforcing the rule of law and fighting crime is a failure when for the first 9 months of this year the national crime index increased by 12.6% to 170,481 crimes reported as compared to 151,444 crimes reported for the same period last year.

DAP General Assemblies Do Not Contain Fiery Seditious Speeches That Threatens To Burn Down Kuala Lumpur Or Bathe In The Blood Of Other Malaysians.
Finally, national unity is under severe strains with higher intolerance on race and religion as exemplified by extremist threats of UMNO delegates in this general assembly such as:-
n another repeat of May 13 worse than the racial riots in 1969 that would leave Kuala Lumpur completely devastated and ruined battlefield.
n Umno is willing to risk lives, use the kris and bathe in blood in defence of race and religion from non-Muslims or non-Malays.

UMNO leaders have tried to justify such seditious and inflammatory speeches by claiming that the general assemblies of other political parties such as MCA and Gerakan contain similar speeches and that the DAP meetings are worse than UMNO’s in promoting and defending non-Malay rights and attack Malay interests. I wish to state categorically that DAP meetings have never made inflammatory speeches threatening to burn down towns,harm or bathe in the blood of other Malaysians. DAP is an inclusive and peaceful party using constitutional means to benefit all Malaysians regardless of race and religion.

DAP demands that action under the Sedition Act be taken against any political parties whether MCA, Gerakan or other opposition political parties that allows such seditious and inflammatory speeches be made. Stern action must be taken against political parties that seeks to harm and hurt Malaysians.

Definition Of Bangsa Malaysia Accepted By All Malaysians With No Race As The Pivotal Or Dominant Race.
DAP stood alone for 40 years promoting Malaysian Malaysia, opposed by BN that practiced divide and rule politics based on race and religion. DAP believed the path towards nation-building was not towards a pure nation state that is homogenous and uniform but is heterogenous and diverse. Unity in diversity was our commitment, respect and acceptance of political equality and social-economic justice our political struggle.

In the face of persecution where DAP leaders were detained or charged in court on flimsy grounds, DAP held steadfast to this singular concept of building a nation with a shared destiny and common values. This burning idealism of DAP leaders garnered overwhelming support from Malaysians, especially non-Malays, until BN leaders posed this question, “What does the non-Malays want?”

Finally former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad bowed to DAP’s superior logic by accepting the future destiny of Malaysians lies in DAP’s Malaysian Malaysia, which Mahathir called Bangsa Malaysia. Even though DAP faced electoral losses when BN successfully co-opted Bangsa Malaysia as part of national policy, DAP gave full support in the interests of the nation.

Bangsa Malaysia is one of the nine challenges in Vision 2002 of achieving developed nation status. Mahathir defined it succinctly in an Asiaweek’s 6/10/1995 issue as "people being able to identify themselves with the country, speak Bahasa Malaysia and accept the Constitution”. This definition of Bangsa Malaysia with no race as the pivotal race over other races have been accepted by most Malaysians.

For the past decade this definition of Bangsa Malaysia has been part of national policy. However on 17.11.2006, everything changed during the winding-up speech by UMNO Deputy President and Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak at the UMNO General Assembly. Najib declared that Bangsa Malaysia was not part of national policy but only a general concept. He gave assurances that the present constitutional provision protecting Malay special rights would not be affected just as Malay dominance over all other races would be the hallmark of BN in government.

Struggle For The Sole Of Malaysia Has Begun
The struggle for the soul of Malaysia has begun, whether we see our country as a nation for all or bracketed into first and second-class citizens with the Malays as the pivotal race. By abandoning Bangsa Malaysia as part of national policy in preference for Malay dominance, Malaysia is going backwards towards Hitler’s racial supremacy and regressing towards South African’s apartheid policies of racial dominance.

Malaysians must not allow UMNO to continue to divide us but must stand up together to loudly and clearly oppose the language of racial division hatred and violence in the UMNO General Assembly. That Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi did not even reprimand UMNO delegates for threatening to kill and burn non-Muslims and their homes shows that he is not the Prime Minister of all Malaysians. Using majority power to rule by fiat and divine rule makes a mockery of democracy which ensures basic inalienable rights of political equality and socio-economic justice to minorities.

Rejecting Bangsa Malaysia is only the first step towards homogeneity with a common race, religion, language and culture as well as uniformity of the necessary laws to achieve these goals. The ugly manifestation of such discriminatory policies can be seen when non-Malays who have lived here for centuries are somehow inferior to Malays who have only been granted citizenship. For instance, Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Mohd Khir Toyo’s father was an Indonesian from Jawa whilst his mother a Malaysian citizen. However Mohd Khir is now a bumiputera superior to all Malays whose grandparents were born in Malaysia. Is this fair and just?

DAP Perak Must Double Its 3 Parliamentary And 7 State Seats To Drive Home The Message That Bangsa Malaysia A Part Of National Policy Again.
DAP Perak must double its 3 parliamentary and 7 state seats to drive home the message that Bangsa Malaysia is part of national policy again. As the front-line state, DAP Perak should take the lead to restore Bangsa Malaysia with shared values and a common destiny. Our shared values revolve around democracy, freedom, justice, integrity and human dignity for all.

This is our common destiny – achieving and enjoying prosperity together. We must emphasize wealth creation and an equitable wealth distribution relying on academic excellence, economic competitiveness, technological merit and knowledge management as well as based on the principle that the benefits of prosperity and burdens are to be shared equitably.

There can be no Malay agenda, Chinese agenda, Kadazan agenda, Iban agenda or Indian agenda. There is only one Malaysian agenda. We see a Malaysian soul that is peaceful, inclusive, tolerant and respects everyone not one that is filled with hatred, exclusive, intolerant and oppresses other Malaysians. Let all Malaysians who love freedom, democracy, integrity and justice fight to save the soul of our nation.

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Perak DAP State Annual Convention(1)

8:55 AM Posted by DAP Perak 霹雳州民主行动党


Speech By DAP Secretary-General Lim Guan Eng During The Perak DAP State Annual Convention In Excelsior Hotel, Ipoh On 26.11.2006
­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

Restoring Bangsa Malaysia As Part Of National Policy

In the UMNO General Assembly, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s policy speech “Fulfilling Promises” was not the most important speech because he failed to fulfill promises did not perform well even in his self-designed own report card. The most important speech was made by Deputy UMNO President Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak in his winding up on 17 November 2006 when he said that “Bangsa Malaysia” was not part of national policy but only a general concept. This is a complete reversal of previous BN policy of creating a national Malaysian race that can over-ride race and religion in the path towards national unity.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi would only just pass his own self-desinged report card by garnering a 42% score as he has only made progress in 5 out of his 12 pillars of good governance. (40% is now the passing mark in schools as compared to 50% during our time)

Abdullah's 12 pillars of good governance are:-
1. Effective leadership is respected leadership.
2. Democracy flourishes through collective responsibility.
3. Development of human capital via quality holistic education programmes.
4. Ensure economic growth by exploring new sources while focusing on rural development and modernization of agriculture.
5. Develop a bumiputera commercial and industrial community, and a bumiputera science and technology community.
6. Acknowledging the role of the private sector to generate economic growth, particularly in creating new economic opportunities.
7. To enhance public sector performance, in particular, improving public delivery systems, and facilitate the role of the private sector.
8. Addressing corruption by emphasizing on both preventive and punitive approaches.
9. Enforcing the rule of law in a firm and transparent manner, particularly in the fight against crime.
10. Encouraging a more equitable and active participation of youth and the emancipation of women.
11. Defending Malaysia's sovereignity.
12. Strengthening national unity.

Of the 12 pillars, Abdullah can only claim progress in 5 pillars namely, rural development and agriculture(No. 4), bumiputera development(No. 5), acknowledging the role of private sector(No. 6), youth and women(No. 10), and defending Malaysia’s sovereignty(No. 11). As for the remaining 7 pillars, either no progress has been made or Malaysia has backslided in becoming worse off.

How can there be effective leadership when his predecessor who appointed him has declared open war against Abdullah barely 2 years after Abdullah took over as Prime Minister? Where are the improvements in democracy when oppressive laws such as as Printing Presses & Publications Act(PPPA), Sedition Act(SA), Internal Security Act(ISA) and Official Secrets Act(OSA) are still retained and applied indiscriminately and arbitrarily.

Corruption is now worse off than when Tun Dr Mahathir retired in 2003, Malaysia was ranked No. 37 under the Transparency International’s(TI) Corruption Perception Index.but now is ranked No. 44. The latest RM 600 million rural development fund announced by Abdullah is given exclusively to the UMNO Division heads of RM 3 million each. Human capital development still takes a back seat to racial quotas and anti-competitive policies.

Public sector performance, especially in delivery system is poor with the litany of abuses of powers, non-performance or delays in implementation of development projects by civil servants resulting in higher costs or abandoned projects. Even enforcing the rule of law and fighting crime is a failure when for the first 9 months of this year the national crime index increased by 12.6% to 170,481 crimes reported as compared to 151,444 crimes reported for the same period last year.

DAP General Assemblies Do Not Contain Fiery Seditious Speeches That Threatens To Burn Down Kuala Lumpur Or Bathe In The Blood Of Other Malaysians.
Finally, national unity is under severe strains with higher intolerance on race and religion as exemplified by extremist threats of UMNO delegates in this general assembly such as:-
n another repeat of May 13 worse than the racial riots in 1969 that would leave Kuala Lumpur completely devastated and ruined battlefield.
n Umno is willing to risk lives, use the kris and bathe in blood in defence of race and religion from non-Muslims or non-Malays.

UMNO leaders have tried to justify such seditious and inflammatory speeches by claiming that the general assemblies of other political parties such as MCA and Gerakan contain similar speeches and that the DAP meetings are worse than UMNO’s in promoting and defending non-Malay rights and attack Malay interests. I wish to state categorically that DAP meetings have never made inflammatory speeches threatening to burn down towns,harm or bathe in the blood of other Malaysians. DAP is an inclusive and peaceful party using constitutional means to benefit all Malaysians regardless of race and religion.

DAP demands that action under the Sedition Act be taken against any political parties whether MCA, Gerakan or other opposition political parties that allows such seditious and inflammatory speeches be made. Stern action must be taken against political parties that seeks to harm and hurt Malaysians.

Definition Of Bangsa Malaysia Accepted By All Malaysians With No Race As The Pivotal Or Dominant Race.
DAP stood alone for 40 years promoting Malaysian Malaysia, opposed by BN that practiced divide and rule politics based on race and religion. DAP believed the path towards nation-building was not towards a pure nation state that is homogenous and uniform but is heterogenous and diverse. Unity in diversity was our commitment, respect and acceptance of political equality and social-economic justice our political struggle.

In the face of persecution where DAP leaders were detained or charged in court on flimsy grounds, DAP held steadfast to this singular concept of building a nation with a shared destiny and common values. This burning idealism of DAP leaders garnered overwhelming support from Malaysians, especially non-Malays, until BN leaders posed this question, “What does the non-Malays want?”

Finally former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad bowed to DAP’s superior logic by accepting the future destiny of Malaysians lies in DAP’s Malaysian Malaysia, which Mahathir called Bangsa Malaysia. Even though DAP faced electoral losses when BN successfully co-opted Bangsa Malaysia as part of national policy, DAP gave full support in the interests of the nation.

Bangsa Malaysia is one of the nine challenges in Vision 2002 of achieving developed nation status. Mahathir defined it succinctly in an Asiaweek’s 6/10/1995 issue as "people being able to identify themselves with the country, speak Bahasa Malaysia and accept the Constitution”. This definition of Bangsa Malaysia with no race as the pivotal race over other races have been accepted by most Malaysians.

For the past decade this definition of Bangsa Malaysia has been part of national policy. However on 17.11.2006, everything changed during the winding-up speech by UMNO Deputy President and Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak at the UMNO General Assembly. Najib declared that Bangsa Malaysia was not part of national policy but only a general concept. He gave assurances that the present constitutional provision protecting Malay special rights would not be affected just as Malay dominance over all other races would be the hallmark of BN in government.

Struggle For The Sole Of Malaysia Has Begun
The struggle for the soul of Malaysia has begun, whether we see our country as a nation for all or bracketed into first and second-class citizens with the Malays as the pivotal race. By abandoning Bangsa Malaysia as part of national policy in preference for Malay dominance, Malaysia is going backwards towards Hitler’s racial supremacy and regressing towards South African’s apartheid policies of racial dominance.

Malaysians must not allow UMNO to continue to divide us but must stand up together to loudly and clearly oppose the language of racial division hatred and violence in the UMNO General Assembly. That Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi did not even reprimand UMNO delegates for threatening to kill and burn non-Muslims and their homes shows that he is not the Prime Minister of all Malaysians. Using majority power to rule by fiat and divine rule makes a mockery of democracy which ensures basic inalienable rights of political equality and socio-economic justice to minorities.

Rejecting Bangsa Malaysia is only the first step towards homogeneity with a common race, religion, language and culture as well as uniformity of the necessary laws to achieve these goals. The ugly manifestation of such discriminatory policies can be seen when non-Malays who have lived here for centuries are somehow inferior to Malays who have only been granted citizenship. For instance, Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Mohd Khir Toyo’s father was an Indonesian from Jawa whilst his mother a Malaysian citizen. However Mohd Khir is now a bumiputera superior to all Malays whose grandparents were born in Malaysia. Is this fair and just?

DAP Perak Must Double Its 3 Parliamentary And 7 State Seats To Drive Home The Message That Bangsa Malaysia A Part Of National Policy Again.
DAP Perak must double its 3 parliamentary and 7 state seats to drive home the message that Bangsa Malaysia is part of national policy again. As the front-line state, DAP Perak should take the lead to restore Bangsa Malaysia with shared values and a common destiny. Our shared values revolve around democracy, freedom, justice, integrity and human dignity for all.

This is our common destiny – achieving and enjoying prosperity together. We must emphasize wealth creation and an equitable wealth distribution relying on academic excellence, economic competitiveness, technological merit and knowledge management as well as based on the principle that the benefits of prosperity and burdens are to be shared equitably.

There can be no Malay agenda, Chinese agenda, Kadazan agenda, Iban agenda or Indian agenda. There is only one Malaysian agenda. We see a Malaysian soul that is peaceful, inclusive, tolerant and respects everyone not one that is filled with hatred, exclusive, intolerant and oppresses other Malaysians. Let all Malaysians who love freedom, democracy, integrity and justice fight to save the soul of our nation.
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