INTRODUCTION
Endowed with a
diversity of cultures, Malaysia offers a truly Asian experience. Discover a
delightful fusion of tree of Asia’s oldest civilizations – Malay, Chinese and
Indian. A potpourri enriched with the indigenous traditions of the Kadazan
Dusun, Ibans and other ethnic communities of Sabah and Sarawak.
Experience the
country’s alluring wonders – colourful festivals, breathtaking skycrapes,
charming heritage buildings, enchanting islands and beaches as well as a
million-year-pld rainforest with fascinating flora and fauna. Meet the warm
and friendly people and enjoy world – class facilities. Marvel at the
bewildering range of shopping delights and tempt your palate with mouthwatering
delicacies. Bursting with colour, pulsating with life, Malaysia awaits you.
History
About 10.000 years ago, the Orang Asli (comparable to
Malay Aboriginals) left from southwest China to the peninsula we now call
West-Malaysia. Until 1405 the following superpowers reigned over the peninsula;
the Funan (Cambodia), the Srivijaya (Sumatra) and the Majapahit (Java). From
1405 onwards the Chinese influence in this area grew. In this period the
Islamic way of thinking also set in when Arabic traders arrived. In a short
period of time many people converted to this religion. From 1500 on the trade
in Southeast Asia increased enormously. The European superpowers of that
time acquired interest in the local resources, the era of trade over sea had
started and Malaysia would play a big part in it.
Japanese invasion during World War II ended British domination in Malaysia. The subsequent occupation of Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak from 1942 to 1945 unleashed nationalism. In the Peninsula, the Malayan Communist Party took up arms against the British. A tough military response was needed to end the insurgency and bring about the establishment of an independent, multi-racial Federation of Malaya in 1957. On 31 August 1963, the British territories in North Borneo and Singapore were granted independence and formed Malaysia with the Peninsular states on 16 September 1963. Approximately two years later, the Malaysian parliament passed a bill to separate Singapore from the Federation. A confrontation with Indonesia occurred in the early-1960s. Race riots in 1969 led to the imposition of emergency rule, and a curtailment of political life and civil liberties which has never been fully reversed. Since 1970 the "National Front coalition" headed by UMNO has governed Malaysia.
Prehistory
Stone hand-axes from early hominoids, probably
Homo erectus,
have been unearthed in Lenggong. They date back 1.83 million years, the oldest
evidence of hominid
habitation in Southeast Asia. The earliest evidence of modern human habitation
in Malaysia is the 40,000 year old skull excavated from the Niah Caves
in Borneo in 1958. A study of Asian genetics points to the idea that the
original humans in Asia came from in Southeast Asia. The oldest complete
skeleton found in Malaysia is 11,000-year old Perak Man unearthed in 1991. The
indigenous groups on the peninsula can be divided into three ethnicities, the
Negritos, the Senois, and the proto-Malays. The first inhabitants of the Malay
Peninsula were most probably Negritos. These Mesolithic
hunters were probably the ancestors of the Semang, an
ethnic Negrito
group who have a long history in the Malay Peninsula.
The Senoi appear to be a
composite group, with approximately half of the maternal DNA lineages
tracing back to the ancestors of the Semang and about half to later ancestral
migrations from Indochina. Scholars suggest they are descendants of early
Austroasiatic-speaking agriculturalists, who brought both their language and
their technology to the southern part of the peninsula approximately 4,000
years ago. They united and coalesced with the indigenous population. The Proto Malays
have a more diverse origin and had settled in Malaysia by 1000 BC. Although
they show some connections with other inhabitants in Maritime Southeast Asia, some also have an
ancestry in Indochina around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum about 20,000 years ago.
Anthropologists support the notion that the Proto-Malays originated from what
is today Yunnan,
China. This was followed by an early-Holocene dispersal through the Malay
Peninsula into the Malay Archipelago. Around 300 BC, they were
pushed inland by the Deutero-Malays, an Iron Age
or Bronze Age
people descended partly from the Chams
of Cambodia and Vietnam. The first group in the peninsula to use metal tools,
the Deutero-Malays were the direct ancestors of today's Malaysian
Malays, and brought with them advanced farming techniques. The
Malays remained politically fragmented throughout the Malay archipelago,
although a common culture and social structure was shared.
Early Kingdom
In the first millennium CE, Malays became the dominant
race on the peninsula. The small early states that were established were
greatly influenced by Indian culture. Indian influence in the region dates back
to at least the 3rd century BCE.
The Malay Peninsula was known to ancient Tamils as Suvarnadvipa
or the "Golden Peninsula". It was shown on Ptolemy's map as the "Golden Khersonese". He referred to the Straits of Melaka as Sinus
Sabaricus. Trade relations with China and India were established in the 1st
century BC. Shards of Chinese pottery have been found in Borneo dating from the 1st
century following the southward expansion of the Han Dynasty. In the early centuries of the first millennium, the
people of the Malay Peninsula adopted the Indian religions of Hinduism and Buddhism, religions which had a major effect on the language
and culture of those living in Malaysia. The Sanskrit writing system was used as early as the 4th century.
There were numerous Malay kingdoms in the 2nd and 3rd
century, as many as 30, mainly based on the Eastern side of the Malay
peninsula. Among the earliest kingdoms known to have been based in what is now
Malaysia is the ancient empire of Langkasuka, located in the northern Malay Peninsula and based
somewhere in Kedah. It was closely tied to Funan in
Cambodia, which also ruled part of northern Malaysia until the 6th century.
According to the Sejarah Melayu ("Malay Annals"), the Khmer
prince Raja Ganji Sarjuna founded the kingdom of Gangga Negara (modern-day Beruas, Perak)
in the 700s. Chinese chronicles of the 5th century CE speak of a great port in
the south called Guantoli, which is thought to have been in the Straits of
Malacca. In the 7th century, a new port
called Shilifoshi is mentioned, and this is believed to be a Chinese rendering
of Srivijaya.
Between the 7th and the 13th century, much of the Malay
peninsula was under the Buddhist Srivijaya empire. The site of Srivijaya's centre is thought be
at a river mouth in eastern Sumatra, based near what is now Palembang. For over six
centuries the Maharajahs of Srivijaya ruled a maritime empire that became the
main power in the archipelago. The empire was based around trade, with local
kings (dhatus or community leaders) swearing allegiance to the central lord for
mutual profit.
In 1025 and 1026 Gangga Negara was attacked by Rajendra
Chola I, the Tamil emperor who is now thought to have laid Kota Gelanggi to waste. Kedah—known as Kedaram, Cheh-Cha
(according to I-Ching) or Kataha, in ancient Pallava or Sanskrit—was in the direct route of the invasions and was
ruled by the Cholas from 1025. The senior Chola's successor, Vira
Rajendra Chola, had to put down a Kedah rebellion to overthrow other invaders.
The coming of the Chola reduced the majesty of Srivijaya, which had exerted influence over Kedah, Pattani and as far as Ligor.
Avalokiteshvara
statue found in Perak, 8th–9th century bronze.
Pattinapalai, a Tamil poem of the 2nd century CE, describes goods
from Kedaram heaped in the broad streets of the Chola capital. A
7th-century Sanskrit drama, Kaumudhimahotsva, refers to Kedah as
Kataha-nagari. The Agnipurana also mentions a territory known as
Anda-Kataha with one of its boundaries delineated by a peak, which scholars
believe is Gunung Jerai. Stories from the Katasaritasagaram describe
the elegance of life in Kataha. The Buddhist kingdom of Ligor took control of
Kedah shortly after. Its king Chandrabhanu used it as a base to attack Sri Lanka in the 11th century, an event noted in a stone
inscription in Nagapattinum in Tamil Nadu and in the Sri Lankan chronicles, Mahavamsa.
At times, the Khmer kingdom, the Siamese kingdom, and
even Cholas kingdom tried to exert control over the smaller Malay states. The
power of Srivijaya declined from the 12th century as the relationship between
the capital and its vassals broke down. Wars with the Javanese caused it to
request assistance from China, and wars with Indian states are also suspected.
In the 11th century CE the centre of power shifted to Melayu, a port possibly
located further up the Sumatran coast at near the Jambi River.
The power of the Buddhist Maharajas was further undermined by the spread of Islam.
Areas which were converted to Islam early, such as Aceh, broke away from
Srivijaya’s control. By the late 13th century, the Siamese kings of Sukhothai had brought most of Malaya under their rule. In the
14th century, the Hindu Java-based Majapahit empire came into possession of the peninsula.
Arrival of Islam
Islam came to the Malay Archipelago via Arab and Indian traders in the 13th century,
ending the age of Hinduism and Buddhism. It arrived in the region gradually,
and became the religion of the elite before it spread to the commoners. The
Islam in Malaysia was influenced by previous religions and was originally not
orthodox.
The port of Malacca on the west coast of the Malay Peninsula was founded
in 1402 by Parameswara, a Srivijaya prince fleeing Temasek (now Singapore),who was claimed in the Sejarah
Melayu to be a descendant of Alexander the
Great. Parameswara in particular sailed to Temasek to escape persecution. There he came under the
protection of Temagi, a Malay chief from Patani who was appointed by the king
of Siam as regent of Temasek. Within a few days, Parameswara
killed Temagi and appointed himself regent. Some five years later he had to
leave Temasek, due to threats from Siam. During this period, a Javanese fleet
from Majapahit attacked Temasek.
The earliest record of a local law influenced by
Islamic teaching and written in Jawi.
The stone monument is found in Terengganu.
Parameswara headed north to found a new settlement. At
Muar, Parameswara considered siting his new kingdom at
either Biawak Busuk or at Kota Buruk. Finding that the Muar location was not suitable, he
continued his journey northwards. Along the way, he reportedly visited Sening
Ujong (former name of present-day Sungai Ujong) before reaching a fishing
village at the mouth of the Bertam River (former name of the Melaka River), and
founded what would become the Malacca Sultanate. Over time this developed into modern-day Malacca Town. According to the Malay Annals, here Parameswara saw a mouse deer outwitting a dog resting under a Malacca tree. Taking this as a good omen, he decided to establish
a kingdom called Malacca. He built and improved facilities for trade. The Malacca
Sultanate is commonly considered the first
independent state in the peninsula.
At the time of Melaka's founding, the emperor of Ming Dynasty China was sending out fleets of ships to expand
trade. Admiral Zheng He called at Malacca and brought Parameswara with him on
his return to China, a recognition of his position as legitimate ruler of
Malacca. In exchange for regular tribute, the Chinese emperor offered Melaka
protection from the constant threat of a Siamese attack.
The Chinese and
Indians who settled in the Malay Peninsula before and during this period are
the ancestors of today's Baba-Nyonya and Chetti community. According
to one theory, Parameswara became a Muslim when he married a Princess of Pasai
and he took the fashionable Persian title "Shah", calling himself
Iskandar Shah. Chinese chronicles mention that in 1414, the son of the first
ruler of Malacca visited the Ming
emperor to inform them that his father had died. Parameswara's son was then
officially recognised as the second ruler of Melaka by the Chinese Emperor and
styled Raja Sri Rama Vikrama, Raja of Parameswara of Temasek and Malacca and he
was known to his Muslim subjects as Sultan Sri Iskandar Zulkarnain Shah or
Sultan Megat
Iskandar Shah. He ruled Malacca
from 1414 to 1424. Through the influence of Indian Muslims and, to a lesser
extent, Hui people from China, Islam became increasingly common during
the 15th century.
After an initial period paying tribute to the Ayutthaya, the kingdom rapidly assumed the place previously
held by Srivijaya, establishing independent relations with China, and exploiting
its position dominating the Straits to control the China-India maritime trade,
which became increasingly important when the Mongol conquests closed the
overland route between China and the west.
Within a few years of its establishment, Malacca
officially adopted Islam. Parameswara became a Muslim, and due to the fact
Malacca was under a Muslim Prince the conversion of Malays to Islam accelerated
in the 15th century. The political power of the Malaccan
Sultanate helped Islam’s rapid spread
through the archipelago. Malacca was an important commercial centre during this
time, attracting trade from around the region. By the start of the 16th
century, with Malaccan
Sultanate in the Malay peninsula and parts of Sumatra, the Sultanate of
Demak in Java, and other kingdoms
around the Malay archipelago increasingly converting to Islam, it had become the
dominant religion among Malays, and reached as far as the modern-day
Philippines, leaving Bali as an isolated
outpost of Hinduism today.
Malacca's reign lasted little more than a century, but
during this time became the established centre of Malay culture. Most future
Malay states originated from this period. Malacca became a cultural centre,
creating the matrix of the modern Malay culture: a blend of indigenous Malay
and imported Indian, Chinese and Islamic elements. Malacca's fashions in
literature, art, music, dance and dress, and the ornate titles of its royal court, came to be seen as the standard for all ethnic
Malays. The court of Malacca also gave great prestige to the Malay
language, which had originally evolved in
Sumatra and been brought to Malacca at the time of its foundation. In time
Malay came to be the official language of all the Malaysian states, although local languages
survived in many places. After the fall of Malacca, the Sultanate of Brunei
became the major centre of Islam.
Struggles for Hegemony
The closing of the overland route from Asia to Europe
by the Ottoman Empire and the claim towards trade monopoly with India
and southeast Asia by Arab traders, led European powers to look for a maritime
route. In 1511 Afonso de
Albuquerque led an expedition to Malaya
which seized Malacca with the intent of using it as a base for activities in
southeast Asia. This was the first colonial claim on what is now Malaysia. The
son of the last Sultan of Malacca, Sultan Alauddin Riayat Shah II fled to the southern tip of the peninsula, where he
founded a state that which became the Sultanate of
Johor. Another son created the Perak Sultanate to the
north. By the late 16th century the tin mines of northern Malaya had been
discovered by European traders, and Perak grew wealthy on the proceeds of tin
exports. Portuguese influence was strong, as they aggressively tried to convert
the population of Malacca to Catholicism. In 1571 the Spanish captured Manila and established a colony in the Philippines, reducing
the Sultanate of Brunei's power.
After the fall of Malacca to Portugal, the Johor
Sultanate and the Sultanate of Aceh on northern Sumatra moved to fill in the
power vacuum left behind. The three powers struggled to dominate the Malay
peninsula and the surrounding islands. Johor founded in the wake of Malacca's
conquest grew powerful enough to rival the Portuguese, although it was never
able to recapture the city. Instead it expanded in other directions, building
in 130 years one of the largest Malay states. In this time the numerous attempts
to recapture Malacca led to a strong backlash from the Portuguese, whose raids
even reached Johor's capital of Johor Lama in 1587.
In 1607, the Sultanate of Aceh rose as the powerful and wealthiest state in Malay
archipelago. Under Iskandar Muda reign, he extended the sultanate's control over a
number of Malay states. A notable conquest was Perak, a tin-producing state on
the Peninsula. The strength of his formidable fleet was brought to an end with
a disastrous campaign against Malacca in 1629, when the combined Portuguese and
Johor forces managed to destroy all his ships and 19,000 troops according to
Portuguese account. Aceh forces was not destroyed, however, as Aceh was able to
conquer Kedah within the same year and taking many of its citizens to Aceh. The
Sultan's son in law, Iskandar Thani, former prince of Pahang later became his
successor. The conflict over control of the straits went on until 1641, when
the Dutch (allied to Johor) gained control of Malacca.
In the early 17th century the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde
Oost-Indische Compagnie, or VOC) was established. During this time the
Dutch were at war with Spain, who obtained the Portuguese Empire due to the Iberian Union. From there they expanded across the archipelago,
forming an alliance with Johor and using this to push the Portuguese out of
Malacca in 1641. Backed by the Dutch, Johore established a loose hegemony over
the Malay states, except Perak, which was able to play off Johore
against the Siamese to the north and retain its independence. The Dutch did not
interfere in local matters in Malacca, but at the same time diverted most trade
to its colonies on Java.
The weakness of the small coastal Malay states led to
the immigration of the Bugis, escaping from Dutch
colonisation of Sulawesi, who established numerous settlements on the
peninsula which they used to interfere with Dutch trade. They seized control of
Johor following the assassination of the last Sultan of the old Melaka royal
line in 1699. Bugis expanded their power in the states of Johor, Kedah, Perak,
and Selangor. The Minangkabau from center Sumatra migrated into Malaya, and
eventually established their own state in Negeri Sembilan. The fall of Johore left a power vacuum on the Malay Peninsula which was partly filled by the
Siamese kings of Ayutthaya kingdom, who made the five northern Malay states—Kedah, Kelantan, Patani, Perlis, and Terengganu — their vassals. Johore’s eclipse also left Perak as
the unrivalled leader of the Malay states.
The economic importance of Malaya to Europe grew
rapidly during the 18th century. The fast-growing tea trade between China and
United Kingdom increased the demand for high-quality Malayan tin, which was
used to line tea-chests. Malayan pepper also had a high reputation in Europe,
while Kelantan and Pahang had gold mines. The
growth of tin and gold mining and associated service industries led to the first influx of foreign settlers into the
Malay world—initially Arabs and Indians, later Chinese—who colonised the towns
and soon dominated economic activities. This established a pattern which
characterised Malayan society for the next 200 years—a rural Malay population
increasingly under the domination of wealthy urban immigrant communities, whose
power the Sultans were unable to resist.
British Influence
English traders had been present in Malay waters since
the 17th century. Until the arrival of the British European power became fully
apparent in Malaysia. Before the mid-19th-century British interests in the
region were predominantly economic, with little interest in territorial
control. Already the most powerful coloniser in India, they were looking
towards southeast Asia for new resources. The growth of the China trade in
British ships increased the Company’s desire for bases in the region. Various
islands were used for this purpose, but the first permanent acquisition was Penang, leased from the Sultan of Kedah in 1786. This was followed soon after by the leasing
of a block of territory on the mainland opposite Penang (known as Province
Wellesley). In 1795, during the Napoleonic
Wars, the British with the consent of the Netherlands
occupied Dutch Melaka to forestall possible French interest in the area.
When Malacca was handed back to the Dutch in 1815, the
British governor, Stamford Raffles, looked for an alternative base, and in 1819 he
acquired Singapore from the Sultan of Johor. The exchange of the British colony
of Bencoolen for Malacca with the Dutch left the British as the
sole colonial power on the peninsula. The territories of the British were set
up as free ports, attempting to break the monopoly held by other colonial
powers as the time, and making them large bases of trade. They allowed Britain
to control all trade through the straits of Malacca. British influence was
increased by Malayan fears of Siamese expansionism, to which Britain made a useful counterweight. During
the 19th century the Malay Sultans aligned themselves the British Empire, due to the benefits of associations with the British
and the belief in superior British civilisation.
In 1824 British hegemony in Malaya (before the name
Malaysia) was formalised by the Anglo-Dutch Treaty, which divided the
Malay archipelago between Britain and the Netherlands. The Dutch evacuated Melaka
and renounced all interest in Malaya, while the British recognised Dutch rule
over the rest of the East Indies.
By 1826 the British controlled Penang, Malacca, Singapore, and the island of Labuan, which they established as the crown colony of the Straits
Settlements, administered first under the East India
Company until 1867, when they were
transferred to the Colonial Office in
London.
Federated and Unfederated
Malay States
Initially, the British followed a policy of
non-intervention in relation between the Malay states. The commercial
importance of tin mining in the Malay states to merchants in the
Straits Settlements led to infighting between the aristocracy on the peninsula.
The destabilisation of these states damaged the commerce in the area, causing
British intervention. The wealth of Perak’s tin mines made political stability
there a priority for British investors, and Perak was thus the first Malay state
to agree to the supervision of a British resident. British gunboat
diplomacy was employed to bring about a
peaceful resolution to civil disturbances caused by Chinese and Malay gangsters
employed in a political tussle between Ngah Ibrahim and Raja Muda Abdullah. The
Pangkor
Treaty of 1874 paved the way for
the expansion of British influence in Malaya. The British concluded treaties
with some Malay states, installing “residents” who advised the Sultans and soon became the
effective rulers of their states. These advisors held power in everything
except to do with Malay religion and customs.
Johore alone resisted, by modernising and giving
British and Chinese investors legal protection. By the turn of the 20th
century, the states of Pahang, Selangor, Perak, and Negeri
Sembilan, known together as the Federated
Malay States, had British advisors. In 1909
the Siamese kingdom was compelled to cede Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis and Terengganu, which already had British advisors, over to the
British. Sultan Abu Bakar of Johor
and Queen Victoria
were personal acquaintances who recognised each other as equals. It was not
until 1914 that Sultan Abu Bakar's successor, Sultan
Ibrahim accepted a British adviser. The
four previously Thai states and Johor were known as the Unfederated Malay States. The states under
the most direct British control developed rapidly, becoming the largest
suppliers in the world of first tin, then rubber.
19th-century Borneo
During the late 19th century the British also gained
control of the north coast of Borneo, where Dutch rule
had never been established. Development on the Peninsula and Borneo were
generally separate until the 19th century. The eastern part of this region (now
Sabah)
was under the nominal control of the Sultan of Sulu, a
vassal of the Spanish Philippines. The rest was the territory of the Sultanate
of Brunei. In 1841 British adventurer James Brooke helped the Sultan of Brunei suppress a revolt, and in
return received the title of raja and the right to govern the Sarawak River
District. In 1846 his title was recognised as hereditary, and the "White
Rajahs" began ruling Sarawak as a recognised independent state. The
Brookes expanded Sarawak at the expense of Brunei.
In 1881 the British North Borneo Company
was granted control of the territory of British North
Borneo, appointing a governor and legislature. It was ruled
from the office in London. Its status was similar to that of a British
Protectorate, and like Sarawak it expanded at the expense of Brunei. The
Spanish Philippines never recognised this loss of the Sultan of Sulu’s territory,
laying the basis of the subsequent Filipino claim to Sabah. In 1888 what was
left of Brunei was made a British protectorate, and in 1891 another Anglo-Dutch
treaty formalised the border between British and Dutch Borneo.
By 1910 the pattern of British rule in the Malay lands
was established. The Straits Settlements were a Crown Colony, ruled by a governor under the supervision of the Colonial
Office in London. Their population
was about half Chinese, but all residents, regardless of race, were British
subjects. The first four states to accept British residents, Perak, Selangor, Negeri
Sembilan, and Pahang, were termed the Federated
Malay States: while technically independent,
they were placed under a Resident-General in 1895, making them British colonies
in all but name. The Unfederated Malay States (Johore, Kedah,
Kelantan, Perlis, and Terengganu) had a slightly larger degree of independence,
although they were unable to resist the wishes of their British Residents for
long. Johore, as Britain’s closest ally in Malay affairs, had the privilege of
a written constitution, which gave the Sultan the right to appoint his own
Cabinet, but he was generally careful to consult the British first.
Race Relation
Unlike some colonial powers, the British always saw their empire as primarily an economic concern, and its colonies were expected to turn a profit for British shareholders. Malaya’s obvious attractions were its tin and gold mines, but British planters soon began to experiment with tropical plantation crops—tapioca, gambier, pepper, and coffee. But in 1877 the rubber plant was introduced from Brazil, and rubber soon became Malaya’s staple export, stimulated by booming demand from European industry. Rubber was later joined by palm oil as an export earner. All these industries required a large and disciplined labour force, and the British did not regard the Malays as reliable workers. The solution was the importation of plantation workers from India, mainly Tamil-speakers from South India. The mines, mills and docks also attracted a flood of immigrant workers from southern China. Soon towns like Singapore, Penang, and Ipoh were majority Chinese, as was Kuala Lumpur, founded as a tin-mining centre in 1857. By 1891, when Malaya’s first census was taken, Perak and Selangor, the main tin-mining states, had Chinese majorities.
The Chinese mostly arrived poor; yet, their belief in industriousness and frugality, their emphasis in their children's education and their maintenance of Confucian family hierarchy, as well as their voluntary connection with tightly knit networks of mutual aid societies (run by "Hui-Guan" 會館, or non-profit organisations with nominal geographic affiliations from different parts of China) all contributed to their prosperity. In the 1890s Yap Ah Loy, who held the title of Kapitan China of Kuala Lumpur, was the richest man in Malaya, owning a chain of mines, plantations and shops. Malaya’s banking and insurance industries were run by the Chinese from the start, and Chinese businesses, usually in partnership with London firms, soon had a stranglehold on the economy. Since the Malay Sultans tended to spend well beyond their means, they were soon indebted to Chinese bankers, and this gave the Chinese political as well as economic leverage. At first the Chinese immigrants were mostly men, and many intended to return home when they had made their fortunes. Many did go home, but many more stayed. At first they married Malay women, producing a community of Sino-Malayans or baba people, but soon they began importing Chinese brides, establishing permanent communities and building schools and temples.
The Indians were initially less successful, since unlike the Chinese they came mainly as indentured labourers to work in the rubber plantations, and had few of the economic opportunities that the Chinese had. They were also a less united community, since they were divided between Hindus and Muslims and along lines of language and caste. An Indian commercial and professional class emerged during the early 20th century, but the majority of Indians remained poor and uneducated in rural ghettos in the rubber-growing areas.
Traditional Malay society had great difficulty coping with both the loss of political sovereignty to the British and of economic power to the Chinese. By the early 20th century it seemed possible that the Malays would become a minority in their own country. The Sultans, who were seen as collaborators with both the British and the Chinese, lost some of their traditional prestige, particularly among the increasing number of Malays with a western education, but the mass of rural Malays continued to revere the Sultans and their prestige was thus an important prop for colonial rule. A small class of Malay nationalist intellectuals began to emerge during the early 20th century, and there was also a revival of Islam in response to the perceived threat of other imported religions, particularly Christianity. In fact few Malays converted to Christianity, although many Chinese did. The northern regions, which were less influenced by western ideas, became strongholds of Islamic conservatism, as they have remained.
The one consolation to Malay pride was that the British allowed them a virtual monopoly of positions in the police and local military units, as well as a majority of those administrative positions open to non-Europeans. While the Chinese mostly built and paid for their own schools and colleges, importing teachers from China, the colonial government fostered education for Malays, opening Malay College in 1905 and creating the Malay Administrative Service in 1910. (The college was dubbed “Bab ud-Darajat” – the Gateway to High Rank.) A Malay Teachers College followed in 1922, and a Malay Women’s Training College in 1935. All this reflected the official British policy that Malaya belonged to the Malays, and that the other races were but temporary residents. This view was increasingly out of line with reality, and contained the seeds of much future trouble.
The Malay teacher's college had lectures and writings that nurtured Malay nationalism and anti-colonialist sentiments. Due to this it is known as the birthplace of Malay nationalism. In 1938, Ibrahim Yaacob, an alumnus of Sultan Idris College, established the Kesatuan Melayu Muda (Young Malays Union or KMM) in Kuala Lumpur. It was the first nationalist political organisation in British Malaya, advocating for the union of all Malays regardless of origin, and fighting for Malay rights and against British Imperialism. A specific ideal the KMM held was Panji Melayu Raya, which called for the unification of British Malaya and Dutch East Indies.
In the years before World War II, the British were concerned with finding the balance between a centralised state and maintaining the power of the Sultans in Malaya. There were no moves to give Malaya a unitary government, and in fact in 1935 the position of Resident-General of the Federated States was abolished, and its powers decentralised to the individual states. With their usual tendency to racial stereotyping, the British regarded the Malays as amiable but unsophisticated and rather lazy, incapable of self-government, although making good soldiers under British officers. They regarded the Chinese as clever but dangerous—and indeed during the 1920s and 1930s, reflecting events in China, the Chinese Nationalist Party (the Kuomintang) and the Communist Party of China built rival clandestine organisations in Malaya, leading to regular disturbances in the Chinese towns. The British saw no way that Malaya’s disparate collection of states and races could become a nation, let alone an independent one.
War and Emergency
The outbreak of war in the Pacific in December 1941
found the British in Malaya completely unprepared. During the 1930s,
anticipating the rising threat of Japanese naval power, they had built a great
naval base at Singapore, but never anticipated an invasion of Malaya from the
north. Because of the demands of the war in Europe, there was virtually no
British air capacity in the Far East. The Japanese were thus able to attack
from their bases in French Indo-China with impunity, and despite stubborn resistance from
British, Australian, and Indian forces, they overran Malaya in two months.
Singapore, with no landward defences, no air cover, and no water supply, was forced to surrender in February 1942, doing
irreparable damage to British prestige. British North Borneo and Brunei were
also occupied.
The Japanese had a racial policy just as the British
did. They regarded the Malays as a colonial people liberated from British
imperialist rule, and fostered a limited form of Malay nationalism, which
gained them some degree of collaboration from the Malay civil service and
intellectuals. (Most of the Sultans also collaborated with the Japanese,
although they maintained later that they had done so unwillingly. The Malay
nationalist Kesatuan Melayu Muda, advocates of Melayu Raya, collaborated with the Japanese, based on the
understanding that Japan would unite the Dutch East Indies, Malaya and Borneo
and grant them independence. The occupiers regarded the Chinese, however, as enemy aliens, and treated them with great harshness: during the
so-called sook ching (purification through suffering), up to 80,000
Chinese in Malaya and Singapore were killed. Chinese businesses were
expropriated and Chinese schools either closed or burned down. Not surprisingly
the Chinese, led by the Malayan
Communist Party (MCP), became the
backbone of the Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA), which with British assistance became the
most effective resistance force in the occupied Asian countries.
Although the Japanese argued that they supported Malay
nationalism, they offended Malay nationalism by allowing their ally Thailand to re-annex the four northern states, Kedah, Perlis,
Kelantan, and Terengganu that had been surrendered to the British in 1909. The
loss of Malaya’s export markets soon produced mass unemployment which affected all races and made the Japanese
increasingly unpopular.
During occupation, ethnic tensions were raised and
nationalism grew. The Malayans were thus on the whole glad to see the British
back in 1945, but things could not remain as they were before the war, and a
stronger desire for independence grew. Britain was bankrupt and the new Labour government was keen to withdraw its forces from the
East as soon as possible. Colonial self-rule and eventual independence were now
British policy. The tide of colonial nationalism sweeping through Asia soon
reached Malaya. But most Malays were more concerned with defending themselves
against the Malayan
Communist Party (MCP) which was
mostly made up of Chinese, than with demanding independence from the British;
indeed, their immediate concern was that the British not leave and abandon the
Malays to the armed Communists of the MPAJA, which was the
largest armed force in the country.
In 1944 the British drew up plans plans for a Malayan Union, which would turn the Federated and Unfederated Malay
States, plus Penang and Malacca (but not Singapore), into a single Crown
colony, with a view towards independence. The Bornean territories and Singapore
were left out as it was thought this would make union more difficult to
achieve. There was however strong opposition from the Malays, who opposed the weakening of the Malay rulers and
the granting of citizenship to the ethnic Chinese and other minorities. The British had decided on
equality between races as they perceived the Chinese and Indians as more loyal
to the British during the war than the Malays. The Sultans, who had initially
supported it, backed down and placed themselves at the head of the resistance.
In 1946 the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) was founded by Malay nationalists led by Dato Onn bin Jaafar, the Chief Minister of Johore. UMNO favoured
independence for Malaya, but only if the new state was run exclusively by the
Malays. Faced with implacable Malay opposition, the British dropped the plan
for equal citizenship. The Malayan Union was thus established in 1946, and was
dissolved in 1948 and replaced by the Federation of
Malaya, which restored the autonomy of the rulers of the
Malay states under British protection.
Meanwhile the Communists were moving towards open
insurrection. The MPAJA had been disbanded in December 1945, and the MCP
organised as a legal political party, but the MPAJA’s arms were carefully
stored for future use. The MCP policy was for immediate independence with full
equality for all races. This meant it recruited very few Malays. The Party’s
strength was in the Chinese-dominated trade unions, particularly in Singapore,
and in the Chinese schools, where the teachers, mostly born in China, saw the Communist Party of China as the leader of
China’s national
revival. In March 1947, reflecting the
international Communist movement’s “turn to left” as the Cold War set in, the MCP leader Lai Tek was purged and replaced by the veteran MPAJA
guerrilla leader Chin Peng, who turned the party increasingly to direct action. These rebels, under the leadership of the Malayan
Communist Party, launched guerrilla
operations designed to force the British out of Malaya. In July, following a
string of assassinations of plantation managers, the colonial government struck
back, declaring a State of
Emergency, banning the MCP and arresting
hundreds of its militants. The Party retreated to the jungle and formed the Malayan Peoples’ Liberation Army, with about 13,000 men under arms, all Chinese.
The Malayan Emergency as it was known, lasted from 1948 to 1960, and
involved a long anti-insurgency campaign by Commonwealth troops in Malaya. The British strategy, which proved
ultimately successful, was to isolate the MCP from its support base by a
combination of economic and political
concessions to the Chinese and the
resettlement of Chinese squatters into “New Villages” in “white areas” free of
MCP influence. The effective mobilisation of the Malays against the MCP was
also an important part of the British strategy. From 1949 the MCP campaign lost
momentum and the number of recruits fell sharply. Although the MCP succeeded in
assassinating the British High Commissioner, Sir Henry Gurney, in October 1951, this turn to terrorist tactics
alienated many moderate Chinese from the Party. The arrival of Lt.-Gen Sir Gerald
Templer as British commander in 1952 was
the beginning of the end of the Emergency. Templer invented the techniques of counter-insurgency warfare in Malaya and applied them ruthlessly.
Although the insurgency was defeated Commonwealth troops remained with the
backdrop of the Cold War. Against this backdrop, independence for the Federation within the Commonwealth was
granted on 31 August 1957, with Tunku Abdul
Rahman as the first prime minister.
Towards Malaysia
The introduction of elected local government was another important step in defeating the Communists. After Joseph Stalin’s death in 1953, there was a split in the MCP leadership over the wisdom of continuing the armed struggle. Many MCP militants lost heart and went home, and by the time Templer left Malaya in 1954 the Emergency was over, although Chin Peng led a diehard group that lurked in the inaccessible country along the Thai border for many years. The Emergency left a lasting legacy of bitterness between Malays and Chinese.
During 1955 and 1956 UMNO, the MCA and the British hammered out a constitutional settlement for a principle of equal citizenship for all races. In exchange, the MCA agreed that Malaya’s head of state would be drawn from the ranks of the Malay Sultans, that Malay would be the official language, and that Malay education and economic development would be promoted and subsidised. In effect this meant that Malaya would be run by the Malays, particularly since they continued to dominate the civil service, the army and the police, but that the Chinese and Indians would have proportionate representation in the Cabinet and the parliament, would run those states where they were the majority, and would have their economic position protected. The difficult issue of who would control the education system was deferred until after independence. This came on August 31, 1957, when Tunku Abdul Rahman became the first Prime Minister of independent Malaya.
This left the unfinished business of the other British-ruled territories in the region. After the Japanese surrender the Brooke family and the British North Borneo Company gave up their control of Sarawak and Sabah respectively, and these became British Crown Colonies. They were much less economically developed than Malaya, and their local political leaderships were too weak to demand independence. Singapore, with its large Chinese majority, achieved autonomy in 1955, and in 1959 the young socialist leader Lee Kuan Yew became Prime Minister. The Sultan of Brunei remained as a British client in his oil-rich enclave. Between 1959 and 1962 the British government orchestrated complex negotiations between these local leaders and the Malayan government.
In 1961 Abdul Rahman mooted the idea of forming "Malaysia", which would consist of Brunei, Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak, and Singapore, all of which had been British colonies. The reasoning behind this was that this would allow the central government to control and combat communist activities, especially in Singapore. It was also feared that if Singapore achieved independence, it would become a base for Chinese chauvinists to threaten Malayan sovereignty. To balance out the ethnic composition of the new nation, the other states, whose Malay and indigenous populations would cancel out the Singaporean Chinese majority, were also included.
Although Lee Kuan Yew supported the proposal, his opponents from the Singaporean Socialist Front resisted, arguing that this was a ploy for the British to continue controlling the region. Most political parties in Sarawak were also against the merger, and in Sabah, where there were no political parties, community representatives also stated their opposition. Although the Sultan of Brunei supported the merger, the Parti Rakyat Brunei opposed it as well. At the Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference in 1961, Abdul Rahman explained his proposal further to its opponents. In October, he obtained agreement from the British government to the plan, provided that feedback be obtained from the communities involved in the merger.
The Cobbold Commission, named after its head, Lord Cobbold, conducted a study in the Borneo territories and approved a merger with Sabah and Sarawak; however, it was found that a substantial number of Bruneians opposed merger. Sabah drew up a list of points, referred to as the 20-point agreement, proposing terms for its inclusion in the new federation. Sarawak prepared a similar memorandum, known as the 18-point agreement. Some of the points in these agreements were incorporated into the eventual constitution, some were instead accepted orally. These memoranda are often cited by those who believe that Sarawak's and Sabah's rights have been eroded over time. A referendum was conducted in Singapore to gauge opinion, and 70% supported merger with substantial autonomy given to the state government. The Sultanate of Brunei withdrew from the planned merger due to opposition from certain segments of its population as well as arguments over the payment of oil royalties and the status of the Sultan in the planned merger. Additionally, the Bruneian Parti Rakyat Brunei staged an armed revolt, which, though it was put down, was viewed as potentially destabilising to the new nation.
After reviewing the Cobbold Commission's findings, the British government appointed the Landsdowne Commission to draft a constitution for Malaysia. The eventual constitution was essentially the same as the 1957 constitution, albeit with some rewording. For instance, giving recognition to the special position of the natives of the Borneo States. Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore were also granted some autonomy unavailable to the states of Malaya. After negotiations in July 1963, it was agreed that Malaysia would come into being on 31 August 1963, consisting of Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore. The date was to coincide with the independence day of Malaya and the British giving self-rule to Sarawak and Sabah. However, the Philippines and Indonesia strenuously objected to this development, with Indonesia claiming Malaysia represented a form of "neocolonialism" and the Philippines claiming Sabah as its territory. The opposition from the Indonesian government led by Sukarno and attempts by the Sarawak United People's Party delayed the formation of Malaysia. Due to these factors, an eight-member UN team had to be formed to re-ascertain whether Sabah and Sarawak truly wanted to join Malaysia. Malaysia formally came into being on 16 September 1963, consisting of Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak, and Singapore. In 1963 the total population of Malaysia was about 10 million.
Challenges of Independence
At the time of independence Malaya had great economic advantages. It was among the world’s leading producers of three valuable commodities, rubber, tin, and palm oil, and also a significant iron ore producer. These export industries gave the Malayan government a healthy surplus to invest in industrial development and infrastructure projects. Like other developing nations in the 1950s and 1960s, Malaya (and later Malaysia) placed great stress on state planning, although UMNO was never a socialist party. The First and Second Malayan Plans (1956–60 and 1961–65 respectively) stimulated economic growth through state investment in industry and repairing infrastructure such as roads and ports, which had been damaged and neglected during the war and the Emergency. The government was keen to reduce Malaya’s dependence on commodity exports, which put the country at the mercy of fluctuating prices. The government was also aware that demand for natural rubber was bound to fall as the production and use of synthetic rubber expanded. Since a third of the Malay workforce worked in the rubber industry it was important to develop alternative sources of employment. Competition for Malaya’s rubber markets meant that the profitability of the rubber industry increasingly depended on keeping wages low, which perpetuated rural Malay poverty.
Foreign objection
Indonesian President Sukarno, backed by the powerful Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), chose to regard Malaysia as a "neocolonialist" plot against his country, and backed a Communist insurgency in Sarawak, mainly involving elements of the local Chinese community. Indonesian irregular forces were infiltrated into Sarawak, where they were contained by Malaysian and Commonwealth of Nations forces. This period of Konfrontasi, an economic, political, and military confrontation lasted until the downfall of Sukarno in 1966. The Philippines objected to the formation of the federation, claiming North Borneo was part of Sulu, and thus the Philippines. In 1966 the new president, Ferdinand Marcos, dropped the claim, although it has since been revived and is still a point of contention marring Philippine-Malaysian relations.
Racial strife
The Depression of the 1930s, followed by the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War, had the effect of ending Chinese emigration to Malaya. This stabilised the demographic situation and ended the prospect of the Malays becoming a minority in their own country. At the time of independence in 1957, the Malays were 55% of the population, the Chinese 35% and the Indians 10%. This balance was altered by the inclusion of the majority Chinese Singapore, upsetting many Malays. The federation increased the Chinese proportion to close to 40%. Both UMNO and the MCA were nervous about the possible appeal of Lee's People's Action Party (then seen as a radical socialist party) to voters in Malaya, and tried to organise a party in Singapore to challenge Lee's position there. Lee in turn threatened to run PAP candidates in Malaya at the 1964 federal elections, despite an earlier agreement that he would not do so (see PAP-UMNO Relations). Racial tensions intensified as PAP created an opposition alliance aiming for equality between races. This provoked Tunku Abdul Rahman to demand that Singapore withdraw from Malaysia, which it did in August 1965.
The most vexed issues of independent Malaysia were education and the disparity of economic power among the ethnic communities. The Malays felt unhappy with the wealth of the Chinese community, even after the expulsion of Singapore. Malay political movements emerged based around this. However, since there was no effective opposition party, these issues were contested mainly within the coalition government, which won all but one seat in the first post-independence Malayan Parliament. The two issues were related, since the Chinese advantage in education played a large part in maintaining their control of the economy, which the UMNO leaders were determined to end. The MCA leaders were torn between the need to defend their own community’s interests and the need to maintain good relations with UMNO. This produced a crisis in the MCA in 1959, in which a more assertive leadership under Lim Chong Eu defied UMNO over the education issue, only to be forced to back down when Tunku Abdul Rahman threatened to break up the coalition.
The Education Act of 1961 put UMNO’s victory on the education issue into legislative form. Henceforward Malay and English would be the only teaching languages in secondary schools, and state primary schools would teach in Malay only. Although the Chinese and Indian communities could maintain their own Chinese and Tamil-language primary schools, all their students were required to learn Malay, and to study an agreed “Malayan curriculum”. Most importantly, the entry exam to the University of Malaya (which moved from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur in 1963) would be conducted in Malay, even though most teaching at the university was in English until the 1970s. This had the effect of excluding many Chinese students. At the same time Malay schools were heavily subsidised, and Malays were given preferential treatment. This obvious defeat for the MCA greatly weakened its support in the Chinese community.
As in education, the UMNO government’s unspoken agenda in the field of economic development was to shift economic power away from the Chinese and towards the Malays. The two Malayan Plans, and the First Malaysian Plan (1966–70), directed resources heavily into developments which would benefit the rural Malay community, such as village schools, rural roads, clinics, and irrigation projects. Several agencies were set up to enable Malay smallholders to upgrade their production and increase their incomes. The Federal Land Development Authority (FELDA) helped many Malays buy farms or upgrade ones they already owned. The state also provided a range of incentives and low-interest loans to help Malays start businesses, and government tendering systematically favoured Malay companies, leading many Chinese-owned businesses to “Malayanise” their management. All this certainly tended to reduce to gap between Chinese and Malay standards of living, although some argued that this would have happened anyway as Malaysia’s trade and general prosperity increased.
The Crisis of 1969
The collaboration of the MCA and the MIC in these policies weakened their hold on the Chinese and Indian electorates. At the same time, the effects of the government’s affirmative action policies of the 1950s and 1960s had been to create a discontented class of educated but underemployed Malays. This was a dangerous combination, and led to the formation of a new party, the Malaysian People’s Movement (Gerakan Rakyat Malaysia) in 1968. Gerakan was a deliberately non-communal party, bringing in Malay trade unionists and intellectuals as well as Chinese and Indian leaders. At the same time, an Islamist party, the Islamic Party of Malaysia (PAS) and a Chinese socialist party, the Democratic Action Party (DAP), gained increasing support, at the expense of UMNO and the MCA respectively.
At the May 1969 federal elections, the UMNO-MCA-MIC Alliance polled only 48% of the vote, although it retained a majority in the legislature. The MCA lost most of the Chinese-majority seats to Gerakan or DAP candidates. The victorious opposition celebrated by holding a motorcade on the main streets of Kuala Lumpur with supporters holding up brooms as a signal of its intention to make sweeping changes. Fear of what the changes might mean for them (as much of the country's businesses were Chinese-owned), a Malay backlash resulted, leading rapidly to riots and inter-communal violence in which about 6,000 Chinese homes and businesses were burned and at least 184 people were killed. The government declared a state of emergency, and a National Operations Council, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak, took power from the government of Tunku Abdul Rahman, who, in September 1970, was forced to retire in favour of Abdul Razak. It consisted of nine members, mostly Malay, and wielded full political and military power.
Using the Emergency-era Internal Security Act (ISA), the new government suspended Parliament and political parties, imposed press censorship and placed severe restrictions on political activity. The ISA gave the government power to intern any person indefinitely without trial. These powers were widely used to silence the government’s critics, and have never been repealed. The Constitution was changed to make illegal any criticism, even in Parliament, of the Malaysian monarchy, the special position of Malays in the country, or the status of Malay as the national language.
In 1970 three quarters of Malaysians living below the
poverty line were Malays, the majority of Malays were still rural workers, and
Malays were still largely excluded from the modern economy. The government’s
response was the New Economic Policy of
1971, which was to be implemented through a series of four five-year plans from
1971 to 1990. The plan had two objectives: the elimination of poverty,
particularly rural poverty, and the elimination of the identification between
race and prosperity. This latter policy was understood to mean a decisive shift
in economic power from the Chinese to the Malays, who until then made up only
5% of the professional class.
Poverty was tackled through an agricultural
policy which resettled 250,000 Malays on newly cleared
farmland, more investment in rural
infrastructure, and the creation of
free trade
zones in rural areas to create new manufacturing jobs.
Little was done to improve the living standards of the low-paid workers in
plantation agriculture, although this group steadily declined as a proportion
of the workforce. By 1990 the poorest parts of Malaysia were rural Sabah and
Sarawak, which lagged significantly behind the rest of the country. During the
1970s and ‘80s rural poverty did decline, particularly in the Malayan
Peninsula, but critics of the government’s policy contend that this was mainly
due to the growth of overall national prosperity (due in large part to the
discovery of important oil and gas reserves) and migration of rural people to
the cities rather than to state intervention. These years saw rapid growth in
Malaysian cities, particularly Kuala Lumpur, which became a magnet for immigration
both from rural Malaya and from poorer neighbours such as Indonesia, Bangladesh, Thailand and the Philippines. Urban poverty became a
problem for the first time, with shanty towns growing up around the cities.
The second arm of government policy, driven mainly by
Mahathir first as Education Minister and then as Prime Minister, was the
transfer of economic power to the Malays. Mahathir greatly expanded the number
of secondary schools and universities throughout the country, and enforced the
policy of teaching in Malay rather than English. This had the effect of
creating a large new Malay professional class. It also created an unofficial
barrier against Chinese access to higher education, since few Chinese are
sufficiently fluent in Malay to
study at Malay-language universities. Chinese families therefore sent their
children to universities in Singapore, Australia, Britain or the United States
– by 2000, for example, 60,000 Malaysians held degrees from Australian
universities. This had the unintended
consequence of exposing large numbers of
Malaysians to life in Western countries, creating a new source of discontent. Mahathir also
greatly expanded educational opportunities for Malay women – by 2000 half of
all university students were women.
Petronas Twin
Towers, Kuala Lumpur the tallest building in South-East
Asia.
To find jobs for all these new Malay graduates, the
government created several agencies for intervention in the economy. The most
important of these were PERNAS (National Corporation Ltd.), PETRONAS (National Petroleum Ltd.), and HICOM (Heavy Industry
Corporation of Malaysia), which not only directly employed many Malays but also
invested in growing areas of the economy to create new technical and
administrative jobs which were preferentially allocated to Malays. As a result,
the share of Malay equity in the economy rose from 1.5% in 1969 to 20.3% in
1990, and the percentage of businesses of all kinds owned by Malays rose from
39 percent to 68 percent. This latter figure was deceptive because many
businesses that appeared to be Malay-owned were still indirectly controlled by
Chinese, but there is no doubt that the Malay share of the economy considerably
increased. The Chinese remained disproportionately powerful in Malaysian
economic life, but by 2000 the distinction between Chinese and Malay business
was fading as many new corporations, particularly in growth sectors such as
information technology, were owned and managed by people from both ethnic
groups.
Malaysia’s rapid economic progress
since 1970, which was only temporarily disrupted by the Asian
financial crisis of 1997, has not
been matched by change in Malaysian
politics. The repressive measures passed
in 1970 remain in place. Malaysia has had regular elections since 1974, and
although campaigning is reasonably free at election time, it is in effect a one-party
state, with the UMNO-controlled National Front usually
winning nearly all the seats, while the DAP wins some Chinese urban seats and
the PAS some rural Malay ones. Since the DAP and the PAS have diametrically
opposed policies, they have been unable to form an effective opposition
coalition. There is almost no criticism of the government in the media and
public protest remains severely restricted. The ISA continues to be used to
silence dissidents, and the members of the UMNO youth movement are deployed to physically intimidate opponents.
Mahathir administration
Mahathir bin
Mohamad was the leading force in making
Malaysia into a major industrial power.
The restoration of democracy after the 1969 crisis
caused disputes in the UMNO, a struggle of power which increased after the
death of Tun Abdul Razak. The ailing Datuk Hussein Bin Onn replaced him, but
the fight for control shifted to appointing the deputy prime minister. Mahathir
bin Mahamad was chosen, an advocate of Bumiputra who also tried to benefit the other ethnic
communities.
Under the premiership of Mahathir bin
Mohamad, Malaysia experienced economic
growth from the 1980s, a 1985–86 property market depression, and returned to
growth through to the mid-1990s.
Mahathir increased privatisation and
introduced the New Development Policy (NDP), designed to increase economic
wealth for all Malaysians, rather than just Malays. The period saw a shift from
an agriculture-based economy to one based on manufacturing and industry in
areas such as computers and consumer electronics. It was during this period,
too, that the physical landscape of Malaysia changed with the emergence of
numerous mega-projects. Notable amongst these projects were the construction of
the Petronas Twin
Towers (at the time the tallest building in the world, and,
as of 2010, still the tallest twin building), KL International Airport (KLIA), the North-South Expressway,
the Sepang International Circuit,
the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC), the Bakun hydroelectric dam, and Putrajaya, the new federal administrative capital.
Under Mahathir bin
Mohamad’s long Prime Ministership
(1981–2003), Malaysia’s political culture became increasingly centralised and authoritarian,
due to Mahathir's belief that the multiethnic Malaysia could only remain stable
through controlled democracy. In 1986–87, he faced leadership challenges among
his own party. The Internal Security Act was invoked in October 1987 arresting
106 people, including opposition leaders. The head of the judiciary and five
members of the supreme court who had questioned his use of the ISA were also
arrested, and a clampdown on Malaysia's press occurred.
This culminated in the dismissal and imprisonment on
unsubstantiated charges of the Deputy Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim, in 1997 after an internal dispute within the government.
The complicity of the judiciary in this piece of persecution was seen as a
particularly clear sign of the decline of Malaysian democracy. The Anwar affair
led to the formation of a new party, the People's
Justice Party, or Keadilan, led by
Anwar’s wife, Wan Azizah
Wan Ismail. At the 1999 elections Keadilan
formed a coalition with the DAP and the PAS known as the Alternative Front (Barisan
Alternatif). The result of this was that
the PAS won a number of Malay seats from UMNO, but many Chinese voters
disapproved of this unnatural alliance with the Islamist PAS, causing the DAP
to lose many of its seats to the MCA, including that of its veteran leader, Lim Kit Siang. Wan Azizah won her husband’s former constituency in
Penang but otherwise Keadilan made little impact.
In the late 1990s, Malaysia was shaken by the Asian financial crisis, which damaged
Malaysia's assembly line-based economy. Mahathir combated it initially with IMF
approved policies. However, the devaluation of the Ringgit and the deepening recession caused him to create his
own programme, based on protecting Malaysia from foreign investors and
reinvigorating the economy through construction projects and the lowering of
interest rates. The policies caused Malaysia's economy to rebound by 2002, but
brought disagreement between Mahathir and his deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, who backed the IMF policies.This led to the sacking
of the Anwar, causing political unrest. Anwar was arrested and banned from
politics on what are considered trumped up charges. In 2003 Mahathir,
Malaysia's longest serving prime minister, voluntarily retired in favour of his
new deputy, Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi. In November 2007 two
anti-government rallies occurred, precipitated by allegations of corruption and
discrepancies in the election system that heavily favoured the ruling political
party, National Front, which has been in
power since Malaya achieved independence.
Badawi administration
Dato Seri Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi freed Anwar, which was seen as a
portent of a mild liberalisation. At the 2004 election,
the National Front led by Abdullah had a massive victory, virtually wiping
out the PAS and Keadilan, although the DAP recovered the seats it had
lost in 1999. This victory was seen as the result mainly of Abdullah's personal
popularity and the strong recovery of Malaysia’s economy, which has lifted the
living standards of most Malaysians to almost first world standards, coupled with an ineffective opposition.
The government's objective is for Malaysia to become a fully developed
country by 2020 as expressed in Wawasan 2020. It leaves unanswered, however, the question of when
and how Malaysia will acquire a first world political system (a multi-party democracy, a free press, an independent
judiciary and the restoration of civil and
political liberties) to go with its new economic maturity.
In November 2007, Malaysia was rocked by two
anti-government rallies. The 2007 Bersih Rally which was attended by 40,000 people was held in Kuala
Lumpur on 10 November 2007, to campaign for electoral reform. It was precipitated by allegations of corruption and
discrepancies in the Malaysian election system that heavily favour the ruling political party,
Barisan Nasional, which has been in power since Malaysia achieved its
independence in 1957. Another rally was held on 25 November 2007, in Kuala
Lumpur led by HINDRAF. The rally organiser, the Hindu Rights Action Force,
had called the protest over alleged discriminatory policies favouring ethnic
Malays. The crowd was estimated to be between 5,000 and 30,000. In both cases
the government and police tried to prevent the gatherings from taking place.
On 16 October 2008, HINDRAF was banned when the
government labelled the organisation as "a threat to national
security".
In April 2009 Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi resigns
from politics, soon after Dr.M (Mahathir) joins UMNO again. Malaysia's new
Prime Minister is Najib Tun Razak. He promises many changes, the question is
whether he is capable of really taking Malaysia to the next level. He has the
difficult task to make 'his' 1 Malaysia happen. 1 Malaysia is an on-going
campaign announced by Najib calling for the cabinet, government agencies, and
civil servants to emphasize ethnic harmony, national unity, and efficient
governance. The eight values of 1 Malaysia as articulated are perseverance, a
culture of excellence, acceptance, loyalty, education, humility, integrity, and
meritocracy. There will be new elections early 2013. Then we will see if Prime
Minister Najib did enough to convince and please the 'Raykat' (the People).
In July 2011 a movement comprising of many
organizations called Bersih 2.0 made plans to organize a demonstration in Kuala
Lumpur to protest for fair elections during the upcoming elections. The
government deemed the group illegal and bersih organizers did not get a permit
which they needed to demonstrate. They did not gave up and proceeded with the
preparations. At some point even the King played a part in the developments,
advising government and bersih to come up with a peaceful solution. Both
agreed, but soon after the government again dissalowed Bersih 2.0 to take
place. The government put Kuala Lumpur in lockdown at Friday 8th of July midnight.
At 9 July 2011 most of the roads leading to KL were blocked, people were
frisked and car trunks were checked. Nonetheless well over 20.000 demonstrators
made it into the city center before 11am. Even numerous opposition leaders made
it to the meeting points, ignoring the fact that they were put on a list with
people that weren't allowed in the city that day. Around 1pm the rally towards
Stadium Merdeka started, but crowds moved slowly because of all the road blocks
set up by police and special units. Things turned sour at 1.30pm when police
starting to use water cannons and tear gas on the crowds. Around 4pm
demonstrators declared Bersih2.0 a succes and the city turned back to normal.
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