Datuk Seri Awang Sariyan said individuals who do not respect the national language can be fined up to RM50,000 or sentenced to imprisonment through amendments to the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) Act 1959. — Picture via Facebook/Awang Sariyan Kembara Bahasa
KUALA LUMPUR, June 21 — Individuals who do not respect the national language can be fined up to RM50,000 or sentenced to imprisonment through amendments to the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) Act 1959.
DBP board of governors chairman Prof Datuk Seri Awang Sariyan said the two punishments were among the items proposed in the amendments to the act, which are now in the final stage of discussion before being presented to the prime minister next month.
“This is not about grammar or spelling errors, but disrespect for the national language. The proposed fine is not to punish but to evoke love and patriotism to the country,” he told reporters after attending DBP’s 66th Anniversary celebration here today.
Prior to this, it was reported that the government would amend the DBP Act to allow the statutory body to take action against any violation of the Bahasa Melayu usage, including at the district level.
Awang said DBP also proposed that the National Language Act be amended in line with the amendments to the DBP Act so that it could carry out its duties as a language enforcer more effectively.
“The National Language Act is the parent act to the DBP Act. If it is expanded, the government can ask DBP to implement the language policy more effectively,” he said.
On the amendments, he said it should be implemented holistically, not only in terms of enforcement but also in the aspect of internationalisation, accreditation and licencing of literary languages. — Bernama
KUALA LUMPUR, June 21 — Individuals who do not respect the national language can be fined up to RM50,000 or sentenced to imprisonment through amendments to the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) Act 1959.
DBP board of governors chairman Prof Datuk Seri Awang Sariyan said the two punishments were among the items proposed in the amendments to the act, which are now in the final stage of discussion before being presented to the prime minister next month.
“This is not about grammar or spelling errors, but disrespect for the national language. The proposed fine is not to punish but to evoke love and patriotism to the country,” he told reporters after attending DBP’s 66th Anniversary celebration here today.
Prior to this, it was reported that the government would amend the DBP Act to allow the statutory body to take action against any violation of the Bahasa Melayu usage, including at the district level.
Awang said DBP also proposed that the National Language Act be amended in line with the amendments to the DBP Act so that it could carry out its duties as a language enforcer more effectively.
“The National Language Act is the parent act to the DBP Act. If it is expanded, the government can ask DBP to implement the language policy more effectively,” he said.
On the amendments, he said it should be implemented holistically, not only in terms of enforcement but also in the aspect of internationalisation, accreditation and licencing of literary languages. — Bernama
"Disrespect for Bahasa Melayu" is so vague, the law could be enforced against all kinds of people for all kinds of hidden purposes.
ReplyDeleteThe first targets would certainly be against the usage of English and Chinese in the private sector and commercial sector.
Nobody talks of how the nation can mitigate inflation, food shortages or insecurity, high price of energy, how to grow our economy, but instead all the nonsensical stuff and sending some idiot to India to talk about the insult to Islam, about political frogs, about another Z frog from PKR to Bersatu and to PBM... oohhh! What a freaking mess!
ReplyDeleteSimple answer!
DeleteFor the past decades of ketuanan & zombieic indoctrinations, nothing can stir the emotive powers of the ketuanan freaks/zombies/blur-sotong about their existential worth.
Hence, their chosen elites, too, know how to play their game of political relevancy. Thus, the continual lining of their pockets!