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Sunday, 13 May 2018

Hurray to Malaysia

Truly a historic week for Malaysia. The ex-PM at the age of 92, rallies the people to overthrow a horrendously corrupt regime. In less than 20 years, Malaysia had regressed from being a leading moderate Islamic country to a country where religion was used to divide and a veil for cronyism. Credible leaders and thinkers highly regarded by the international community were replaced with amoral puppets.  Now the man who masterminded the industrialisation of Malaysia has salvaged the country from the brink of hopelessness. Harapan is aflame. 

Had Najibism been more discreet, would it have triggered the People's Tsunami? It took many hard knocks before the country mustered enough willpower to fight this Goliath. Yet I am not clear whether this is a fight for how things used to be or how things ought to be (or is how things used to be how things ought to be?). Is it too soon to ask this question or will it be too late to do anything about it once the wheels of politics starts turning again?  Will meritocracy at least be in the front seat even if it isn't ever going to be centre stage?  It is a good start that for the first time in 60 years a non-Bumiputra  with a proven track record  has been entrusted with the role of Finance Minister. There needs to be trust that meritocracy is about getting the best people to do the right thing so that everyone prospers - everything that Najibism stood against.


The citizens of Chinese and Indian descent are very proud to call themselves Malaysians. For those of them who work in Singapore, you can sense how proud they are of their origins and citizenship. The fact that they have been treated as second class in Malaysia does not stop them from being every bit true Malaysians. They have been in Malaysia for many generations and for many more generations to come. They don't have any other place to call home. My siblings are Malaysians so I know this too well. Rather than feeling indignant, they have been faithfully praying for change in the country. 

Reformasi is a journey and some things will take time to change. But I hope that Malaysians won't allow complacency to set in. The PM is 92 and with all due respect, there isn't a 3rd return if things go dreadfully wrong again in 50 years time. There are jokes about how relieved people are that they no longer have to attend a Bersih rally. But actually the door is now just open so that the cleaning up work can start. 



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