KUALA
LUMPUR - Former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has again resurrected
the issue of the supposed "marginalisation" of Malays in Singapore as
part of his strident campaign to unseat Prime Minister Najib Razak.
But at
least one prominent Malay politician in Malaysia has brushed aside the former
premier's remarks, saying Singaporean Malays are not marginalised.
"I
can't wait for Malays here to be like Singaporean Malays," said Mr Zaid
Ibrahim, a former law minister who left Umno and joined the opposition.
In a
video released on Sunday, Tun Dr Mahathir said that if Datuk Seri Najib stays
in power, the Malays in Malaysia could become marginalised like their Singapore
counterparts.
Speaking
during a closed-door forum on June 17 with several non-governmental
organisations at the Perdana Foundation, Dr Mahathir referred to the
controversy surrounding the state investment fund, 1Malaysia Development
Berhad, repeating that he found it difficult to imagine how it racked up RM42
billion (S$15 billion) in debts.
"But
if we don't acknowledge the crime that is happening here, there is a high
likelihood that we will lose and we will be divided... And we will suffer the
fate of the Malays in Singapore, in southern Thailand and other places,"
he said.
Mr Zaid
responded on Sunday saying he disagreed with Dr Mahathir's claim.
"Sorry
Tun if under Najib Malays here will become like Spore Malays; I will give him
full support. Malays under Najib will be Talibans," the former minister
wrote on Twitter.
On
Wednesday, Mr Zaid issued a clarification in his blog, claiming that an online
news portal had suggested that his tweet meant that he would not mind Malays in
Malaysia being marginalised as long as they do not become extremists like the
Taleban.
"Malays
are the majority ethnic group in Malaysia and have complete control over
government and its apparatus, so to talk of Malay marginalisation is absolute
nonsense," he said in the post on his blog, The Zaidgeist.
Mr Zaid
reiterated that he did not want to see Malays becoming marginalised and poor.
"Malays
should be given the best opportunities to improve and they deserve much more
than what they currently have. But not all Malays in Malaysia are marginalised.
In fact, they are first-class citizens at least on paper. Unfortunately, they
have not been able to reap the benefits of first-class treatment because they
do not have a good government with honest leaders," he wrote.
"That's
what Malays here need. Good government with good, clean and honest
leaders."
Source: AsiaOne
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