Can Malaysia break away from a nation which breeds suspicion, distrust and hatred among races and religions to one which builds tolerance, trust and confidence among them to leverage on the assets of diverse races, religions and civilisations to become a world top-class nation?


Yesterday, I said the many national holidays in Malaysia afford Malaysians the opportunities for reflection and review as to why the country failed to achieve greater goals, such as pondering how Malaysia could transform from a global kleptocracy to a leading nation of integrity in the world.

Just as ordinary Malaysians saved Malaysia from a global kleptocracy and a failed state, the challenge of whether Malaysia transforms from a global kleptocracy to a leading nation of integrity in the world will rest on their shoulders.

Similarly, ordinary Malaysians also have to wrestle with another great conundrum of the nation – whether Malaysia can succeed in nation building out of the diverse races, religions, languages and cultures that have made Malaysia their home to become a model of an united, tolerant, successful, progressive and prosperous plural entity in a complex and plural world.

The Open House celebrations during the Chinese New Year this year, like the other Malaysian festivities throughout the year, are the seedbeds to cultivate tolerance and respect for the diverse races, religions, languages and cultures in Malaysia where diversity is the strength and not the weakness of the nation.

But such recognition of the real strength for plural Malaysia must not remain at the level of rhetorics but must inform all aspects of one’s life.

In this connection, Malaysians must note a dangerous tendency of late, where politics had been contaminated by the vicious and toxic politics of lies, fear, hate, race and religion, where instead of building tolerance, trust and confidence among the diverse races, religions, languages and cultures that meet in confluence in Malaysia, there is an insidious attempt to breed suspicion, distrust and hatred among the diverse races, religions, languages and cultures so as to poison the well of Malaysian nation-building

I myself had been the most demonized character in Malaysia for the past half a century.

I was accused of being a communist, in fact, a relative of Chin Peng; responsible for the May 13, 1969 riots, leading the street demonstrations in Kuala Lumpur shouting anti-Malay and anti-Islam slogans although I was never in Kuala Lumpur after the May 10, 1969 General Election; painted as quite a devil, a puaka, even jembalang; that I am anti-Malay, anti-Islam and at various times even anti-Indian, anti-Chinese educated Chinese , anti-English-educated Chinese; an agent of KGB, CIA, MI6 and even Australian Intelligence.

Before the 14th General Election, such toxic politics alleged that I will be the Prime Minister of Malaysia if Pakatan Harapan wins the polls. When such lies and falsehoods were proved wrong after May 9, new lies and falsehoods were manufactured to allege that I am the real power in the Pakatan Harapan government in Putrajaya and that Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, Anwar Ibrahim, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail and Mohamad Sabu were merely my stooges and puppets.

Now I am alleged to be wanting to get into the Cabinet. What a great come-down!

I was alleged to have received RM1 billion from Mahathir for him to join and head Pakatan Harapan; RM100 million from tycoon Robert Kuok and over RM1.2 billion from Israeli sources to fund the 13th General Election; given RM40 million to a news portal; offered PAS President Hadi Awang RM100 million to defy the Sultan of Selangor; want to disband Malay Regimen and destroy Malaysia-China relations, and a litany of incredible fake news, false information and downright lies!

It was even alleged that on Dec. 3, 2016, I had a secret meet with Tun Mahathir where we sealed an agreement that after the 14th General Election, Mukhriz Mahathir would be the Prime Minister and I the Deputy Prime Minister.

In actual fact, there was no such Dec. 3, 2016 meeting with Mahathir at all and in my various meeting with Mahathir before the 14th General Election, we never discussed the subject of Prime Minister or Deputy Prime Minister!

I was even accused of wanting to split Peninsular Malaysia into two, East Coast for the Malays and the West Coast for the Chinese.

During the Cameron Highlands by-election, I was accused of saying that the Orang Asli in Malaysia are not citizens of Malaysia and a message was zapped through WhatsApp, viz:

“Lim Kit Siang mengusulkan didlm Dewan Rakyat supaya perkataan Islam Dan Melayu digugurkan dlm Perlembagaan.”

These were all downright lies as there is no basis of any truth in them at all.

May be I should thank my lucky stars that I had not been alleged of giving RM90 million to Hadi!

I am reminded of the 47th ABIM annual congress last October themed “Visi Islam dalam aspirasi Malaysia Baharu” and the keynote address by Professor Datuk Dr. Siddiq Fadzil on “Malaysia Baharu & Kesinambungan Reformasi Islahiy”, where Dr. Siddiq stressed that the prerequisite for the building of a New Malaysia is to undertake a “human and cultural transformation”.

He spoke of “nilai malu” which he described as “nilai teras ajaran Islam”.

He said:

“Sifat malu adalah kekuatan moral yang dapat mengawal seseorang daripada melakukan perbuatan keji. Sifat malu juga adalah ciri orang bermaruah. Justeru, orang bermaruah malu berperilaku tidak bermoral, malu melakukan korupsi, malu menganggotai organisasi korup, malu di perintah kerajaan korup, malu dipimpin ketua korup, malu ditipu dan diperbodoh, malu menjadi bangsa yang ketinggalan, malu negaranya disebut ‘kleptocracy at its worst’.”

This “moral deficit” and the death of idealism in politics is the greatest culprit today in the politics of lies, hate, fear, race and religion in Malaysia today.

If the lies and falsehoods disseminated about me by the well-funded anti-DAP cybertroopers are to be believed, then I am a billionaire and an “evil force” who threw tens and even hundreds of millions ringgit to sponsor news portals or remove recalcitrant heads of key government bureau apart from the litany of demonization of me over the decades.

Although the 14th General Election result on May 9, 2018 was a defeat and setback to the politics of lies, hate, fear, race and religion, the purveyors of this vicious and toxic politics had intensified and even escalated their campaign.

Undoubtedly, in our plural society today, there are still Chinese who are living completely in the Chinese world, Malays who are living in a completely Malay world, Indians who are living in a completely Indian world, and the same goes with the Ibans and the Kadazans.

Our greatest challenge in a New Malaysia is how to reach out to them, the Chinese living in a completely in the Chinese world, Malays living in a completely Malay world, Indians living in a completely Indian world, to share with them a larger Malaysian picture and perspective – to share our ideals that this beloved Malaysian nation belongs to all of us, that we have a shared destiny.

Can this spirit of oneness as Malaysians transcending race, religion, region or party politics prevail in our country so that we are not distracted from our Malaysian Dream to build a great Malaysia for all Malaysians?

How do we nurture the bond of oneness among Malaysians, regardless of race, religion, region or even party politics and stop the rise of intolerance, hatred, bigotry and extremism in our plural society through lies, fake news and false information?

As far back as 61 years ago by Bapa Malaysia, Tunku Abdul Rahman, enunciated the Malaysian Dream to be “a beacon of light in the disturbed and distracted world”.

Dare we continue to dream such a Malaysian Dream, and do more – oppose and expose the practitioners of the toxic and vicious politics of lies, hate, fear, race and religion because they are the greatest enemies of the Malaysian Dream, seeking to breed suspicion, distrust and hatred among the diverse races and religions instead of building tolerance, trust and confidence among the diverse races and religions so that we can leverage on the assets of the diversity in Malaysia for the country to become a world top-class nation.

This is our greatest challenge as Malaysians in a New Malaysia to reset nation-building policies and directions.

The price for our failure will be a dire one – a divided Malaysia and a failed state!

(Media Statement by DAP MP for Iskandar Puteri Lim Kit Siang in Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday, 6th February 2019)

  1. #1 by Bigjoe on Wednesday, 6 February 2019 - 9:34 pm

    If we remain open and place a higher priority to drive development in rural and poor instead of just going for low hanging fruits or indulge in vanity and over fantasies about possibilities. We need to bring progress, real education, bring the real world into the lives and minds of those that feel disconnected from the world.

    If we can do that, open up the minds what real world is so they seek the world out instead of hiding their minds in clossetted old religo text and ideas, then we have a chance.

    If we have to, we need to subsidise that change. Pay rural teachers more, provide better facilities and resources, subsidise communication, ideas in rural and poor, public transport and connectivity. Bring the world to them or pull them out and deep into the biggest global cities.

  2. #2 by good coolie on Monday, 18 February 2019 - 12:29 pm

    It is important to study the slide in racial relations since Merdeka. It must be borne in mind that at that time we had to contend with Communists and the Confrontation from our serumpun: this kept the nation united. Later, when both threats disappeared, the races stopped being equal to each other following over-enthusiastic implementation of the NEP. There was also frequent and open insults hurled at minority races together with subtle religious persecution.

    Now, there is a good chance that people will unite again, this time to reject religious extremism (Boko Haram type) in Malaysia and to reject corrupt, greedy politicians.

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