Education of our Federal
Constitution
Interesting facts....
Subject: Article 153 of the Federal Constitution - Read and Know
your constitution
Fifty years after Merdeka, and racial tension has never been worse.
This article was originally written in December 2004! It is quite
long, but read it and you will find out that there is no such thing
as Malay special rights and privileges; Article 153 merely states
'the special position of the Malays'.
Saturday, December 04, 2004
Unveiling the truth of Malay 'Special Rights' ..... - Kim Quek
The recurring issue of Malay 'special rights' was again brought into
focus when Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang moved to reprimand Higher
Education Minister Shaffie Salleh in Parliament on Dec 1st for the
latter's recent racial utterances.
In the recently concluded UMNO annual assembly, Shaffie vowed to
never admit any non-Malay students to the public funded Universiti
Institute Teknologi Mara (UiTM), and he also undertook to ensure
that in spite of the current meritocracy system of university
intake, Malay students would always exceed 55%, which was the
percentage stipulated
under the previous quota system.
Proposing the motion, Kit Siang described these policy statements as
shocking and extremist. He exerted that apart from damaging Malaysia
's international reputation, they undermined national unity and
integration and lowered competitiveness all round.
Opposing the motion, MP Ahmad Shabery Cheek (UMNO, Kemaman) accused
Kit Siang of stirring up racial issues and challenging Malay
'special rights', for which Ahmad quoted Article 153 of the Federal
Constitution which prescribed these rights.
Kit Siang denied these accusations and asked the newly appointed
Speaker Ramli Ngah Talib for a ruling as to whether the motion was
deemed seditious. The Speaker remained silent. As expected, the
motion was eventually rejected in view of ruling party BN's
overwhelming majority.
Forty seven years after Independence , racial issues continued to
monopolise national politics, and championing Malay rights remains
the single dominant ideology of the only ruling power that this
independent nation has known, UMNO. Thousands of speeches have been
made championing this Malay cause, using various terminologies such
as Malay 'special rights', Malay 'special privileges' or simply
Malay 'rights', often invoking the nation's Constitution as the
legal back-up. But, of the thousands of politicians who have used
these terminologies, how many have read through the Constitution to
find out what these 'rights' really are? Very few, perhaps!
Our Constitution is printed in a small booklet that can be bought
for about RM10 in the book shops. Buy one copy and read through to
find out what it says about these 'rights'. After all, these issues
have been the hottest favourites of our politicians ever since our
Independence ... Aren't you curious to find out?
If you have read through the Constitution to look for an answer to
these Malay 'rights', perhaps the first thing that has struck you is
that, familiar terminologies such as Malay 'special rights', Malay
'special privileges' or Malay 'rights' are no where to be found in
the Constitution. Instead, we only find the term 'the special
position of the Malays', which appears twice, in Clause (1) and
Clause (2) of Article 153, which is titled 'Reservation of quotas in
respect of services, permits, etc, for Malays and natives of any of
the States of Sabah and Sarawak'.
(The natives of Sabah and Sarawak were only incorporated into the
Constitution upon the formation of Malaysia in 1963, during which
Sabah , Sarawak and Singapore were merged with Malaya to form
Malaysia ... In this article, the words 'the natives of Sabah and
Sarawak ' will not be repeated after the word 'Malay' when I quote
from the Constitution, for abbreviation purpose).
MP Ahmad Shabery Cheek has of course correctly pinpointed Article
153 as that part of the Constitution upon which Malay 'rights' were
founded. But has he read and understood the full meaning of Article
153?
Anyone who has read through Article 153 might be surprised to
discover that the provisions favouring Malays are in fact quite
moderate, and certainly no way as stretched out in intensity and
scope as our politicians would want us to believe. Similarly, those
provisions protecting the non-Malays as a counter-balance to the
special position of the Malays under this Article are also
surprisingly quite well conceived and fair. In fact, when read in
conjunction with Article 8 (Equality) and Article 136 (Impartial
treatment of Federal employees), Article 153 cannot be construed as
having significantly violated the egalitarian principles of our
Constitution, contrary to common perception.
Since the egalitarian nature of our Constitution is largely intact,
in spite of the presence of Article 153, then why should it have
acquired such an adverse reputation as the legal root of all kinds
of racial inequalities in this country?
Answer: the fault is not with our Constitution, but with our
politicians twisting, misinterpreting and abusing it.
It is perhaps high time we get to the bottom of Article 153.
Clause (1) of Article 153 states: 'It shall be the responsibility of
the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to safeguard the special position of the
Malays and the legitimate interests of other communities in
accordance with the provisions of this Article'.
So, the first understanding that we must have on Article 153 is that
it is meant to protect the interests of not only the Malays, but
also those of the non-Malays.
Next, note the deliberate use of the words 'safeguard' and 'special
position' (instead of 'special rights' or 'special privileges'). The
choice of these words must be understood in the historical context
of the drafting of this Constitution half a century ago when Malays
were economically and educationally backward in relation to other
races. It was thought fit and proper then that there must be
'safeguards' to protect the Malays from being swarmed over by other
races. Hence, the creation of the 'special position' of the Malays,
which was obviously intended for defensive purpose: to protect for
survival. The impeccable avoidance of using words like 'rights' and
'privileges', and the choice of the word 'safeguard' were clearly
calculated to reflect its defensive nature. Under that historical
context, the provision of the special position of the Malays in the
Constitution certainly could not be interpreted to mean the
endowment of racial privileges to create a privileged class o
Clause (2) says that the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall safeguard the
special position of the Malays by reserving positions 'of such
proportion as he may deem reasonable' in a) the public service b)
educational facilities and c) business licenses.
Clauses (3) & (6) say that the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may, for
purpose of fulfilling Clause (2), give general directions to the
relevant authorities, which shall then duly comply.
There is a separate clause covering the allocation of seats in
tertiary education - Clause (8A). It says that where there are
insufficient places for any particular course of study, the Yang
di-Pertuan Agong may give directions for the 'reservation of such
proportion of such places for Malays as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong
may deem reasonable; and the authority shall duly comply with the
directions.'
As for the protection of non-Malays against possible encroachment of
their existing interests, there are several provisions under
different clauses in this Article, prohibiting the deprivation of
the existing facilities enjoyed by them, whether in public service,
education or trading licenses. Of these protective clauses, Clauses
(5) and (9) are particularly significant.
Clause (5) consists of one sentence, which reads: 'This Article does
not derogate from the provisions of Article 136'.
Article 136 also consists of one sentence, which reads: 'All persons
of whatever race in the same grade in the service of the Federation
shall, subject to the terms and conditions of their employment, be
treated impartially.'
Clause (9) consists of one sentence, which reads: 'Nothing in this
Article shall empower Parliament to restrict business or trade
solely for the purpose of reservations for Malays.'
Reading Article 153 will not be complete without reading Article 89
(Equality). I will quote the more significant Clauses (1) and (2) of
this Article in full, as follows:
Clause (1) states: 'All persons are equal before the law and
entitled to the equal protection of the law.'
Clause (2) states: 'Except as expressly authorized by this
Constitution, there shall be no discrimination against citizens on
the ground only of religion, race, descent or place of birth in any
law or in the appointment to any office or employment under a public
authority or in the administration of any law relating to the
acquisition, holding or disposition of property or the establishing
or carrying on of any trade, business, profession, vocation or
employment.'
Reading through these Articles of the Constitution, we are able to
draw the following conclusions:
1. The present clamour for Malay 'special rights' as sacrosanct
racial privileges of a privileged race, especially under the
ideological ambit of Ketuanan Melayu (Malay the master race), is in
conflict with the letters and spirit of the Constitution.
2. The special position of the Malays as prescribed under Article
153 of the Constitution is limited in scope to only the reservation
of reasonable quotas in these 3 sectors: public services,
educational places and business licenses.
Hence, the present rampant racial discriminations practiced on
almost every facet of our national life are mostly violations of the
Constitution. Examples of these violations are:
a) Racial discrimination in the appointment and promotion of
employees in publicly funded bodies, resulting in these becoming
almost mono-raced bodies (particular so in their top strata). These
bodies include: the civil service, police, army and various semi and
quasi government agencies.
b) Barring of non-Malays from tenders and contracts controlled
directly or indirectly by the government.
c) Imposition of compulsory price discounts and quotas in favour of
Malays in housing projects.
d) Imposition of compulsory share quota for Malays in non-Malay
companies.
e) Blanket barring of non-Malays to publicly funded academic
institutions (that should include the UITM, which is the subject of
debate in Parliament referred to earlier in this article).
f) Completely lop-sided allocation of scholarships and seats of
learning in clearly unreasonable proportions that reflect racial
discriminations.
3) Our Constitution provides for only one class of citizenship and
all citizens are equal before the law. The presence of Article 153
does not alter this fact, as it is meant only to protect the Malays
from being 'squeezed' by other races by allowing the reservation of
reasonable quotas on certain sectors of national life. However, this
Constitution has now been
hijacked through decades of hegemony of political power by the ruling
party to result in the virtual monopoly of the public sector by a
single race. The ensuing racism, corruption and corrosion of
integrity of our democratic institutions have brought serious
retrogression to our nation-building process in terms of national
unity, discipline, morality and competitiveness of our people.
4) At this critical juncture, when nations in this region and around
the world are urgently restructuring and shaping up to cope with
globalization, our nation stagnates in a cesspool that has been
created through decades of misrule.
Unless urgent reforms are carried out, beginning with the
dismantling of the anachronistic racial superstructure, we are in
for serious troubles in the days ahead. |