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Thursday, 21 February 2008 08:50

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Grants to Indians and Chinese alone run into millions as govt pulls out all the stops this year

By Jeremy Au Yong, THE STRAITS TIMES

FOR four years after graduating from a local college, Mr David Jeyaraj could not get a job, because he could not prove that he was a Malaysian.

Born in a rural area in Kedah and given away at birth, he was never registered and did not hold an identity card.

When he tried to get one, he ran into a brick wall.

'They had me going in circles. There was so much red tape, just trying to prove that I was born here,' he said.

A few months ago, everything was finally resolved. He got an IC, and found a job working in IT.

But some are calling the pushing through of his application, together with those of thousands of other stateless residents like him, part of the government's drive to sweeten the ground before the general election.

Since then, many other election goodies have been handed out. While the practice is not unique to this election, observers say that the current bout of generosity is the most extensive.

Said prominent Malaysian historian Khoo Kay Khim: 'It is clear they are doing more now. They make a point of announcing all sorts of projects in the lead up to the election.

'In the past, they tended to be quite focused on certain areas, now they doing it on a much larger scale.'

Indeed, announcements of multi-million-dollar schemes have been coming thick and fast in recent weeks, with many of them targeting the Indian and Chinese communities.

Two weeks ago, for example, some RM20 million (S$9 million) worth of grants were approved for the rebuilding and expansion of 23 Tamil schools around the country.

A week later, it was announced that Chinese schools would be getting the same amount.

In between the two announcements, more than 900 farmers squatting on state land were given 30-year-leases; RM7 million was set aside to develop the St Elizabeth School in Sibu, Sarawak and an RM300,000 grant was given to be shared by three schools in Sabah.

The government also said that it would put up RM500,000 to restore an 85-year-old Chinese Assembly Hall in Kuala Lumpur, and the same to spruce up a 191-year-old church in Penang.

In fact, online newspaper malaysiakini.com calculated that the Chinese and Indian communities alone had been promised RM125 million worth of goodies since December.

That is without taking into account intangibles such as declaring Thaipusam a holiday for Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya. All in, it adds up to quite a windfall for voters.

But some question whether the handouts will have the same impact on voters as they used to.

Opposition leaders say that the big issues such as corruption and racial marginalisation this time around may make the voters harder to sway.

Even Mr David, who benefited from the goodies, says that he is still 'undecided' about who will benefit from his new right to vote.

Lawyer and Indian activist S.P. Pathi goes further, saying that the goodies given to the Indian community actually highlight the problems it faces.

'That they are doing all these things now shows that the fundamentals have not been fulfilled,' he said.

'Our schools have been neglected for decades and the Indians cannot even get citizenship. The goodies will help negate some of the negative impact but I think our people are more aware these days.'

Parti Keadilan Rakyat deputy president Syed Husin Ali agreed, but also criticised the practice.

'This is vote-buying. If you want to give allocations to schools or whatever, it should have been done all along, not squeezed all together at the same time before elections,' he said.

But the Umno Youth secretary-general, Datuk Abdul Rahman Dahlan, thinks otherwise, insisting that the government was only doing its job.

He would not be drawn on a discussion about the impact of the goodies, saying that they were not aimed at trying to sway voters.

'I don't think there's anything wrong with helping the people,' he said.

'We have announced bigger projects, multi-billion dollar developments at other times, but nobody said anything. Now we give a few million to Chinese and Tamil schools and there's all this talk.'

Box of goodies

THE Malaysian government has promised some RM125 million (S$54.7 million) worth of goodies to the Chinese and Indian communities since December, online newspaper malaysiakini.com estimates. Here are some examples of the pledges:

  • RM20 million in grants for the rebuilding and expansion of 23 Tamil schools;
  • Grants worth RM10 million for Chinese schools;
  • Thirteen Chinese schools to be relocated to densely populated areas in Klang Valley and Johor; six new Chinese schools to be built;
  • Thirty-year leases given to more than 900 Chinese farmers squatting on state land;
  • RM7 million to develop St Elizabeth School in Sibu, Sarawak;
  • A RM300,000 grant for three Chinese schools in Sabah;
  • RM500,000 each to restore the 85-year-old Chinese Assembly Hall in Kuala Lumpur and a 191-year-old church in Penang;
  • Thaipusam declared a holiday for Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya;
  • Hong Leong Group has pledged to donate RM3 million for the construction of the New Era College campus in Sepang.
  • Comments (14)Add Comment
    ...
    written by us marshall, February 21, 2008 09:03:34
    im an INDIAN malaysian n u can give everthing under the sun to the indians in malaysia but im not voting for u BN SCUMBAGS. PERIOD!!!
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    ...
    written by asguard, February 21, 2008 09:07:58
    Bear in mind... that goodies can be withdrawal anytime after elections... or even reduce the amount... The bottom line when devils announce something ...they are not that 100% sincere..about it with comes with price to pay... bear in mind they will forget or intend to broke their what so ever promises earlier. Their motto of the day is a thousand promise will and shall be broken from time to time... that is what they are made of...
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    ...
    written by Mr Smith, February 21, 2008 09:12:24
    They are insulting the voters' intelligence, as though their votes are cheap can be bought. This is corruption, plain and simple.
    Didn't Mahathir say that this will be the dirtiest election?
    I hope voters will have some dignity and never allow themselves be "prostituted". Money doesn't buy your children's future.
    In any case this is tax payers money and not from the politicians' pockets.
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    ...
    written by batsman, February 21, 2008 09:18:30
    hee-hee-hee DAP should push through a constitutional amendment for GE to be held every year!
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by Malaysiaputra, February 21, 2008 09:36:05
    Thank the govt for the generosity due to the coming election even though it is a beggar's tip compared what the govt is giving to "Malay" schools, but just the same, vote for the opposition. Then, like the case of Kelantan and Terengganu, more will be given.

    Be smart!. Let the govt proof it after the election that they are sincere and if so then the next election, give them your vote. Don't let Umno treat us non Malay Malaysians like stray dogs.
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by InEffective, February 21, 2008 10:33:53
    Imagine what they rakyat could get for the rakyats benefit if they (and not the politicians) controlled the nation's wealth and resources allocation ?

    Only way to make that happen is to ensure that your incumbent governance is reduced to competing in perpetuity (and durably thought the entire 5 year term) for your vote - ie ensure all political parties are somewhat equal/balanced in representation, power, and presence.

    Your choice - politicians control and hijack the allocation of your wealth or you control the allocation of your wealth.
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by Kaboda, February 21, 2008 11:01:17
    The devil is pulling out all the stops, dangling that cash and naked chicks infront of you. Choice is yours ?
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by Eskay Lim, February 21, 2008 12:31:18
    In this period of time before the GE, everybody from the PM to ministers down to all political wannabes are practising corruption. From giving out all those goodies to the people on the street in the hope of getting an extra vote for this election. If this is not corrupt practice, I don't know what is.
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by Natsinned, February 21, 2008 13:03:26
    Positive good deeds by the Government in power is a "must". Cannot claim credit it. Read again what the various comments made above and you will feel and realize that it can be a "mirage" only.
    Why now was the main question. If everything was sweet and done according to what the Malaysian Constitution dictates, corporate governance in place, etc, etc, etc, opposition(they are not anti govt but against the people executing it)is not required for the check and balance.There will also not rerquired to be an election until next year. Cost money for an election. Why, why and why??? The lists goes on on on on...
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    ...
    written by temenggong, February 21, 2008 13:06:12
    As long as a party in power is in a position to decide whether to give or not give, then we have a problem.

    Funding should be a routine policy! Just like funding for any govt programme during a budget.
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    ...
    written by diehard, February 21, 2008 13:13:26
    the goverment dont even have the money to do road resurfacing before election and all of you still believe in all this nonsense...just vote for the opposition lahhh..no need to think who to vote...just vote opposition...
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    ...
    written by AngryTaxpayer, February 21, 2008 17:48:37
    It's happened previously in past elections and it'll happen again this time....all the mega pledges are just hot air, once these BN bigots get elected in, we'll either see a small portion of it or nothing at all and I bet, they will cite economic downturn.
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    ...
    written by miwaki, February 21, 2008 17:57:24
    The only way to get our incompetent government to give more to Indians,Malay and Chinese is to vote oppositions.Let BN lose the election is our responsibility because BN is our liability.

    Only those who have benefitted from our incompetent BN government will support BN,the ordinary citizens will support the oppositions.
    report abuse
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    ...
    written by InEffective, February 21, 2008 19:24:18
    Support only after delivery.

    Remember - incremental trust.
    report abuse
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