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The infrastructure of institutions PDF Print
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Monday, 02 November 2009 04:12

Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah

There are some good things about our country which we do not acknowledge either because are too obvious or because it is politically incorrect to do so. One of these is the role played by British institutions in our country.

 

The Federation of Malaya and later Malaysia did not emerge from the colonial era through violent struggle. Our independence was negotiated, and the Constitution which grounds our existence was built out of consensus. We took an evolutionary rather than a revolutionary path.  This is not to deny or downplay the political struggle leading up to independence.

In the last three decades, however, as the political discourse in this country has taken a more ethno-nationalist and authoritarian tone, there has been an associated tendency to paint present-day Malaysia as a violent rupture with the past.  Nationalism glorifies the fight and undervalues the much harder, rarer accomplishment of coming to an understanding, forging a consensus, building a nation. This is a common and understandable tendency in the way postcolonial nations talk about their past, but it has obscured an aspect of our history which distinguishes us among the states and was an important source of our early success as a nation.

This aspect is that in coming to independence in an orderly and negotiated settlement, we retained intact the best of what we already had and did not have to start from some imagined Ground Zero or mythologized past.

The best of what we already had, come 1957 and 1963, were a set of viable modern institutions practices and skills:  the Westminster model of Parliamentary democracy, civil law grounded in a Constitution,  a capable and independent civil service, including an excellent teaching service, armed forces and police, good schools, sophisticated trade practices and markets, financial markets, and modern methods of management such as those applied in our plantation sector. We were already a functioning country integrated into global markets. The challenges of development and nation-building were serious, but we faced them with an independent judiciary, a professional civil service and a well-defined set of relationships between a Federal Government and our individually sovereign states. Indeed we were able to face these challenges because these institutions functioned well.

Institutionally, we had a good start as a nation.  Why is it important to recall this?

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written by HEADACHE, November 02, 2009 05:21:13
And it was so very close that this great man was nearly the Prime Minister of Malaysia. How different would that have been for this great nation...

Meanwhile the leaders of the country (which I never voted for) continue to plunder the wealth of the nation. An annual leakage of spending of RM28 billion does not seem urgent nor important. In 4 years, the crooks would have plundered RM100 billion.

Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah has always talked about the spirit of 1946. I can feel it through him now.
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written by KC Chin, November 02, 2009 06:44:06
Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah,

You can write and talk till kingdom comes. Those are history. Please make up your mind. There is no hope for Malaysian as long as UMNO/BN still alive. We, the rakyat, want to bury them for the good of all Bangsa Malaysia. We want to make UMNO/BN history.

By way Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, I voted for BN on GE12. After the GE12, I regretted like hell.
Saya Anak Bangsa Malaysia, PERIOD.
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written by krising1, November 02, 2009 07:33:42
Yes, it would be quite unpatrotic to say that we inherited great institutions and screwed them up with our "patrotic" fever to dismantle them. We also inherited a great PWD which built buildings, roads and bridges which still stand in great shape. We had dedicated medical staff running clean and efficient clinics and hospitals instead of the "kandang kerbau" which we call hsopitals.

But Tengku, who in UMMOO or BN listens to you these days? Come and join PR!
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written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , November 02, 2009 12:08:09
Sad but it is true Tengku of what you said.
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