An Old Controversy Gets A New Lease On Life Mirroring The Sign Of The Times



Wong Chun Wai, The Star
IT’S ironic that a controversial statement by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, largely forgotten or more precisely, generally unknown to most Malaysians, would get resurrected.
And even more coincidental that it must come from his daughter, Datuk Paduka Marina Mahathir, who mentioned it in her column in this newspaper.
The editor who cleared her copy was probably not born yet to be able to spot Marina’s error.
The crux of the issue is that Marina had wrongly attributed a “shoot to kill” threat made by the then Home Minister, the late Ghazali Shafie, in the 1970s regarding Vietnamese refugees.
Explosive affair: Dr Mahathir’s statement in 1979 caused an uproar all around the world, sending the people around him scrambling to clear up the mess.

The “shoot to kill” threat was reported in the media to have, in fact, been made by then Deputy Prime Minister Dr Mahathir, her father.
Malaysia made world news for that remark and as usual, for the wrong reasons, a long-running and familiar theme.
I was just an angsty 18-year-old Sixth Former who spent more time reading the newspapers than textbooks.
I remember reading the gaffe by Dr Mahathir, which angered me, although I can’t remember the subsequent details.
Those of us from that generation would recall the Vietnamese refugees, known as Boat People, who began landing on the East Coast beaches in their rickety boats in 1975.
Many perished on their voyages through the rough South China Sea while trying to escape the communist rulers and soon, Pulau Bidong, off Terengganu, was turned into a refugee camp from 1978 to 1991.
Later, a transit camp was set up in Sungai Besi, Kuala Lumpur, as well as seven other camps in the east coast, Sabah and Sarawak.
The camp in Sungai Besi, set up in 1982, was officially closed in 1996 with the repatriation of 22 boat people to Hanoi, the last batch of refugees to leave Malaysia.
By that time, Malaysia had sent 248,194 people to third countries and repatriated 9,592.
In the 80s, many of us driving past Sungai Besi could clearly see the camp. I was assigned by The Star to visit some of these repatriated refugees in Vietnam, ahead of the country’s admission into Asean in 1995.
They were happy to talk to a journalist from Malaysia who showed interest in how they had fared.
Digging into the archives, I interviewed Bui Huu Duyen in Ho Chi Minh City, who said he picked up Bahasa Malaysia from watching television and conversing with the camp policemen.
He was only 16 years old when he fled Vietnam, but it had nothing to do with politics except to migrate to the United States. He jumped on a crammed boat with 200 people on board. After years in Malaysia, he agreed to go home, only to find Russia was no longer communist, Vietnam asylum seekers were no longer automatically considered refugees, a status which would be a passport to resettlement in the West, and Vietnam had launched its doi moi (economic reconstruction) to welcome capitalists.
But not all was rosy. In 1995, over 4,000 refugees tore down the fence at the Sungai Besi camp and even disconnected the power supply in a protest against their return to Vietnam. There were reports that home-made weapons were found.
His years in Sungai Besi, where he learnt English, helped him get a job as a driver.
However, the late 1970s were turbulent times, when boat people began to land on our shores, which tested how Malaysians were going to handle these unwelcome visitors.
The toxic elements of race, religion and politics all came into play, as is expected in Malaysia. In fact, it’s still happening today, as we’re well aware. All this became an explosive affair when Dr Mahathir made that remark.
In her column dated Jan 30, Marina said, among other things: “I’ve been through embarrassing moments abroad when our politicians have said something stupid and then tried to cover it up.
“In the late 70s when we had many Vietnamese refugees landing on our shores, our then home minister announced that we would shoot any that washed up on our beaches.
“Predictably, outrage ensued around the world. He then gave the standard politician’s excuse, that he was misquoted, that he actually said he would ‘shoo’ them away. Did anyone believe it?”
In a Facebook post subsequently, Marina thanked all those who had pointed out the “major factual mistake” in her column, adding “it seems that I’m capable of making my own gaffes, so I stand corrected and sincerely apologise.
“It was not meant to revise history, as some have alleged, it was wholly the weak memory of something that happened when I was barely out of my teens and still trying to make sense of the world.”
It’s understandable. Even the copy clearer at The Star failed to notice the error and in normal cases, the editor would have corrected it and informed the writer.
The uproar caused by Dr Mahathir led to then Prime Minister Tun Hussein Onn reportedly rushing to reassure then UN secretary-general Kurt Waldheim in a letter that there was no such policy.
“I wish to state that our measures to prevent further inflow of the boat people do not include shooting them,” Hussein said, according to news reports.
The Washington Post report noted that Hussein’s statement contradicted Dr Mahathir’s words, “who according to several news agencies, threatened that new refugees would be shot and that the estimated 75,000 in camps here would be put back to sea”. He also was reported to have said that Malaysia was building a fleet of boats.
Last week, veteran journalist Rajan Moses, who was then with Bernama, revealed how he was “punished” for reporting squarely about comments by Dr Mahathir in 1979 that the boat people would be shot on sight to prevent them from landing on Malaysian shores.
Moses said: “I was the only journalist, a Bernama journalist at that, who actually wrote the ‘shoot on sight’ story based on what Dr Mahathir said to a few reporters at the UKM news conference in June 1979.
“It made world headlines. The Bernama story (my story) was played up well, but later was re-edited and tempered to take out the sting in the original story,” he reportedly explained in the Malaysia First chat group, whose members broached the issue.
All this is history, but the controversy has helped put the missing pieces of the jigsaw puzzle together so we can have a better and accurate understanding of the past, and hopefully, a better way of handling similar incidents in the future.
As for me, I’m more worried that our politicians have continued to shoot themselves in their foot and drag the country down.
Just a few years back, my church had to shut down its Vietnamese ministry when almost all the workers had returned home because their country had progressed and moved ahead in Asean.
In just a few decades and despite the wounds of the war, Vietnam has blossomed impressively. It has consistently been among the fastest growing economies in the region in terms of GDP growth, foreign direct investment, and middle-income population.
It’s shaping up as the region’s single economic success story in the coronavirus era, according to asia.nikkei.com.
We have plenty of reasons to be concerned. We can’t even beat the Vietnamese in football now.
Excessive, unconstructive politicking in a democracy does have many pitfalls. Perhaps it’s time we shoo away these politicians. Or shoot them down via the ballot boxes.
 


Artikel ini hanyalah simpanan cache dari url asal penulis yang berkebarangkalian sudah terlalu lama atau sudah dibuang :

https://www.malaysia-today.net/2022/02/06/an-old-controversy-gets-a-new-lease-on-life-mirroring-the-sign-of-the-times/

Kempen Promosi dan Iklan
Kami memerlukan jasa baik anda untuk menyokong kempen pengiklanan dalam website kami. Serba sedikit anda telah membantu kami untuk mengekalkan servis percuma aggregating ini kepada semua.

Anda juga boleh memberikan sumbangan anda kepada kami dengan menghubungi kami di sini
Transport Minister Must Come From Industry Players New Straits Times 02 02 2022

Transport Minister Must Come From Industry Players New Straits Times 02 02 2022

papar berkaitan - pada 3/2/2022 - jumlah : 141 hits
KUALA LUMPUR The country s Transport Minister position should be filled by someone from transport industry players said Malaysian Land Transport Industry Players Its chief activist Kamarudin Mohd Hussain said highlighting their problems to ...
What S New In The Caribbean For 2022

What S New In The Caribbean For 2022

papar berkaitan - pada 11/2/2022 - jumlah : 184 hits
By BY CHARU SURI from NYT Travel https ift tt GW2QchR
Intimate And Minimal Is The New Fuji Restaurant In The Azores

Intimate And Minimal Is The New Fuji Restaurant In The Azores

papar berkaitan - pada 2/2/2022 - jumlah : 122 hits
Project FUJI Restaurant Architects Sequeira Dias Arquitectos Location Ponta Delgada Ilha de Sao Miguel Acores Portugal Area 792 sf Photographs by Ivo Tavares Studio FUJI Restaurant by Sequeira Dias Arquitectos The interior design proposal w...
The Colours Of Life Lepaking Mall Of Medini

The Colours Of Life Lepaking Mall Of Medini

papar berkaitan - pada 2/2/2022 - jumlah : 291 hits
The Colours of Life Lepaking Mall of Medini Layan lepak kat sini jap Nunggu si iqa ngan kengkawan dia Dulu Setiap minggu kat sini Masuk Legoland dengan kebudaks Banyak betul perubahan yang dah berlaku PKP juga banyak merubah lanskap kat sin...
Saddiq And The 749 731 New Voters Perception Or Real

Saddiq And The 749 731 New Voters Perception Or Real

papar berkaitan - pada 4/2/2022 - jumlah : 152 hits
The media frontpaged the 749 731 new voters that will be automatically registered to vote for the Johor snap state election Immediately there is a widespread perception developing that Syed Saddiq will be a phenomenon and holds the card for...
Sow Seeds Of Joy With Domino S Malaysia Among The Elderly This Chinese New Year

Sow Seeds Of Joy With Domino S Malaysia Among The Elderly This Chinese New Year

papar berkaitan - pada 31/1/2022 - jumlah : 229 hits
Sow Seeds of Joy with Domino s Malaysia Among The Elderly This Chinese New Year Tomorrow our Chinese friends all over the world will be celebrating Chinese New Year As per other celebrations in Malaysia these celebrations are our reasons to...
Sowing Seeds Of Joy This Chinese New Year Among The Elderly To Spread Love And Improve Mental Health

Sowing Seeds Of Joy This Chinese New Year Among The Elderly To Spread Love And Improve Mental Health

papar berkaitan - pada 1/2/2022 - jumlah : 218 hits
Sowing Seeds of Joy This Chinese New Year Among the Elderly to Spread Love and Improve Mental HealthDomino s Pizza employees visit Attia Nursing Care Centre in Petaling Jaya with a roaring feast and a creative activity to bring lasting joy ...
The Colours Of Life Bengkel Penyediaan Sow Badan Beruniform

The Colours Of Life Bengkel Penyediaan Sow Badan Beruniform

papar berkaitan - pada 27/1/2022 - jumlah : 191 hits
The Colours of Life Bengkel Penyediaan SOW Badan Beruniform Selesai bengkel pemurnian SOW untuk Badan Uniform Penyelarasan semula bagi memastikan aktiviti yang lebih memberi makna kepada murid Tahniah dan terima kasih atas keberadaan dan ke...
Selepas 20 Tahun Jepun Perkenal Wang Kertas Baharu

Feilina Feisol Mother Friend And Great Advocate Of Autism Rights

Muhyiddin Terlebih Perasan Di Sungai Bakap

Moxy Putrajaya Keselesaan Dan Keseronokkan Dalam Satu Tempat

With China Producing Many Cars Should We Be Happy

Israel Telah Kalah Tapi Ini Bukan Kata Pas

Najib Tun Razak Game Over

Apa Jadi Kalau Rakyat Jumpa Lubuk Emas Belakang Rumah Hak Milik Siapa Sebenarnya



Info Sinopsis Kutipan Filem Kutukan Ilmu Hitam Waruga Black Magic Curse 2024 Kini Di Netflix Malaysia

5 Tumbuhan Berbentuk Aneh Yang Menyerupai Organ Manusia

Info Dan Sinopsis Filem Pemandi Jenazah The Corpse Washer 2024 Kini Di Netflix Malaysia

Berapakah Tahap Kepanasan Suhu Api Dapur Gas Anda

Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Dedaun Hijau Di Angin Lalu Slot Megadrama Astro Ria


Taman Komuniti Sepah Puteri 5 16

Pengeluaran Melalui Akaun Gap Di Gold Atm

The Best Of Celebrity Legs And Feet In Tights Vol 74 The Red White And Blue 2024

Cara Buat Kek Batik Lembut Tanpa Telur Dan Susu Pekat

Enjoying View While It Lasts

Tuai Nenas Md2 Dan Sulurnya