Non-Malays don’t trust Mahathir
From P Ramasamy
It is not that non-Malays fear Malay parties. They are, however, concerned about Malay parties led by leaders like former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
Why should non-Malays in general and the Chinese in particular fear Malay parties like the virtually non-existent Pejuang?
Having lost election deposits of almost all its candidates in the recent Johor state elections, Mahathir-led Pejuang is in total disarray and cannot be counted upon by non-Malays.
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Enough of pessimists like Ramasamy who run down Dr M
From Rafique Rashid Ali
Every month or so, almost like clockwork, P Ramasamy the Penang deputy chief minister, will continue his attack against Dr Mahathir Mohamad. It is an obsession which he can’t seem to overcome.
In his latest piece “Non-Malays don’t trust Mahathir” (FMT March 27), Ramasamy not only targets the former prime minister but has also trained his guns on the Mahathir-led Pejuang. In essence he is stating that Pejuang is a “mosquito party” that “is fading into oblivion”.
Ramasamy and many of his ilk will pick on Mahathir’s narrative that the Malays have been fair to the non-Malays in the past, and concessions were granted to the Chinese by the Malays post-Merdeka which the Chinese could not get from the former colonial British masters.
Why PH must exorcise ‘ghost’ of Mahathir
From P Ramasamy
It is understandable why Rafique Rashid Ali, Pejuang’s federal territory deputy division leader, sprang to the defence of Pejuang’s leader and twice former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad.
Rafique took umbrage to the fact that I was a perennial pessimist when it came to Mahathir and that I should not have called Pejuang a mosquito party.
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Stand by for more machinations of Mahathir Mohamad
From Terence Netto
The assertion by Dr Mahathir Mohamad that non-Malays have nothing to fear from Malay political parties like Pejuang, and the critique by P Ramasamy of DAP leaves an essential point insufficiently stated.
This point is that the rights of Malaysians derive from the federal constitution and no citizen likes to feel he exists on the benevolence or sufferance of whoever it is that happens to rule.
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Dr M is caught in a racial time warp
I was enjoying my evening snack of “ubi kayu” when a notification of a new article popped-up on my iPad: “Nothing to fear being governed by Malay parties, says Dr M” (FMT March 26).
There is a direct link between my dish of tapioca (or singkong) and Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who became prime minister in July 1981.
In his first few years, he closed several companies owned by government agencies. One of those that suffered his wrath was an “ubi kayu” processing factory called Ubiyu, outside Kuantan, Pahang.
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