Dr M: M'sian Indians are not 'completely loyal' to the country
Published: Jan 13, 2024 12:14 PM
Malaysian Indians are not completely loyal to the country as they still identify with their country of origin, claimed former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
Speaking in an exclusive online interview with Indian satellite TV channel Thanthi TV, Mahathir said one should identify as Malay to have the right to call the country their own.
"Malaysian Indians do not speak Malay as their home language, they speak Tamil (instead)," he said when the host asked whether one can't remain loyal to the country while committed to their roots.
The nonagenarian then said that his "problem" is when "immigrants" (Indians and Chinese) call the country their own while professing their own cultures and customs.
When the host asked whether Mahathir expects the non-Malays to "totally assimilate" to become Malays, the latter replied in the affirmative.
"Yes... they should become. In the past, we have people of Indian, Pakistani, Arab, and African origin, who are now Malays.
"In the sense that they speak the Malay language at home, their culture is Malay."
To this, the host asked whether Mahathir expects people of all races to identify as Malays, rather than Malaysians, Mahathir said that "it should be so."
Mahathir claimed that it is the case in any country, where people who want to say they belong to a particular country, are expected to identify as the indigenous community.
When the host pointed out that some may argue that the Orang Asli have more rights as "sons of the soil", Mahathir said his view differed from the host's.
'I'm 100 percent Malay'
The interview then moved on to Mahathir's Indian roots, which the veteran politician completely denied knowledge of.
"No, I'm not an Indian. I'm a Malay because I do not know the Indian language, and that was a long, long time ago," he said.
When asked whether he expects all Malaysians to follow the same, Mahathir replied: "Yes, if they want to claim the country as their own, they must identify themselves completely with this country."
He further denied any knowledge about his Indian (particularly Kerala) roots, stressing that he is "100 percent Malay."
"I'm now 100 percent a Malay, I speak Malay and practice Malay customs and traditions," he insisted.
Mahathir was then asked what he thought about the contribution of the non-Malays to nation-building and the country's economy, to which he replied: "They have been ‘fairly compensated’ for it."
He said that Malaysia was "liberal" enough to make people who don't fully identify with the Malay ministers - referencing BN, which he once led - end up working with components of MCA and MIC in the federal administration.
Mahathir then trained his guns on Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim's administration, which he claimed was riddled with problems.
When the host asked why Mahathir had had issues with each of his successors, the latter claimed that this was because "they did wrong things", including "stealing money".
What's WRONG when "immigrants" (Indians and Chinese) call the country their own while professing their own cultures and customs?
ReplyDeleteAin't the melayu immigrant too?
Why don't they assimilated with the orang asal? Instead, they have all those kelate, minangkabau, riau & what's not!
Assimilation is in the core narrative of the ketuanan fart!
Ini orang yang tak tahu malu. Their ancestors came from 3000km away and still insisting that the Malay peninsula is their land.
DeleteGenetically, this mamak is NO melayu!
ReplyDelete1st, the melayu stock is definitely by empirical semantics of association, not blood!
Thus there isn't a true melayu tulin race.
2nd, not matter how diluted is the bloodline, the genetic code CANNOT he altered completely.
Too bad for this rootless mamak!
Mahathir is being mendacious.
ReplyDeleteI have good testation from someone who knew Mahathir s/o Mohd Iskandar very well at the time, that Mahathir was "Very Indian" Indian Muslim culturally and ethnically, in mannerisms, when he was a medical student in Singapore in late 1940s and early 1950s.