Karpal: Enact Race Relations Act
By Athi Shankar
GEORGE TOWN: The DAP has demanded the federal  government to take immediate steps to legislate the long pending Race  Relations Act to curb growing racism in the country.    Citing the recent racial slurs uttered by high-ranking public officers  as syndromes of disharmony, DAP national chairman Karpal Singh warned  that the situation could become chaotic and lead to violence if the  government does not initiate steps to curb it.
He recalled that  Rural and Regional Development Minister Shafie Apdal, when in charge of  Unity, Culture, Arts and Heritage portfolio, had announced a few years  ago that the government would legislate the Race Relations Act.
He chided the government for failing to pursue the matter further.
The veteran politician now wants the government to issue directives to  the Attorney-General Chambers to immediately draft the bill pertaining  to the Act.
He said the bill should be tabled at Parliament,  preferably in the next session, to enable the government to obtain  public feedback, including the opinions of both Barisan Nasional and  Pakatan Rakyat MPs, to refine and strengthen the proposed Act.
He added that the proposed Act should be a comprehensive, punitive and  deterrent legal mechanism against all types of offences related to  racism and utterance of racist remarks, which, sadly, have become the  order of the day.
“When government officers utter racial slurs  on a routine basis, it is a serious matter. The need for a Race  Relations Act has become urgent,” the two-term Bukit Gelugor MP told  reporters in his office today.
He was commenting on recent  racial slurs uttered by two headmistresses in Kulai, Johor, and Bukit  Selambau, Kedah, respectively against non-Malay pupils.
Pre-planned plot
Press reports today exposed another incident in Kuala Lumpur where an  ethnic Malay police inspector told off a local elderly ethnic Chinese  snatch theft victim to “go back to China” because she could not speak in  Bahasa Malaysia.
Given the similarities in the racial remarks, Karpal hoped that it  was not a pre-planned plot by the National Civic Bureau (Biro Tata  Negara).
Calling on the A-G's Chambers to prosecute “racist”  officers, he expressed reservation that mere suspension and transfer  would not be effective to deter future racist statements.
Karpal  said Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak should put into practice his “zero  tolerance to racism” agenda by legislating the proposed Act soon.
He said Najib should also be partly blamed for the growing trend of  racial slurs by government officers because “he let his former aide  Nasir Safar go scott-free after making racist attacks on ethnic  Malaysian Indians and Chinese early this year”.
Nasir had allegedly said that ethnic Indians were beggars while ethnic Chinese were whores.
Karpal said the proposed Race Relations Act should never protect anyone  from prosecution, “no matter how high the person's position is”.
On controversial rapper Wee Meng Chee, or popularly known as Namewee,  Karpal said the rapper should be spared prosecution under the Sedition  Act 1948 or any other draconian law.
Namewee is under investigation for producing an allegedly seditious video recently.
The rapper first ran into trouble with the authorities with his controversial “Negaraku” video clip in 2007.
“Namewee was only reacting to current trend of racial slurs being uttered by government officers.
"If Namewee were to be charged under the Sedition Act, the government  officers too should be charged under the same Act,” Karpal said.
 
           
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