THE granting of Bumiputera status to the Syrian-born wife of Sarawak Governor Abdul Taib Mahmud has earned condemnation from Sarawakian opposition parties and civil society leaders.
According to copies of the Sarawak Gazette, which have gone viral on social media, Syrian-born Ragad Kurdi Taib and her two sons are now officially recognised as part of the Melanau community, allowing them to hold native title lands.
Ragad, wife of the 82-year-old Taib Mahmud, and her sons, Nizar Mahmoud Madi and Sam Mahmoud Madi, were made Melanau under Section 20 of the state’s Native Court Ordinance 1992 and rule 17F of the Native Court Rules 1993.
Sarawak PKR deputy chairman Abdul Jalil Bujang, who is Melanau, said the recognition showed a double standard where Ragad’s recognition was fast-tracked while some natives remain stateless, or have spouses who have yet to be approved for permanent residency despite being married for decades.
“The person should be ashamed to apply as a native, knowing very well it is unnatural,” said Jalil.
“What respect have you got for that type of person?”
DAP youth leader Abdul Aziz Isa, who is the grand-nephew of Taib, said there are thousands “of other more deserving applicants” for citizenship.
“Ragad could not know the hardship Sarawakians face in being treated fairly as a Malaysian,” said Aziz, who is Melanau on his father’s side.
Aziz said thousands of Malaysians, including the Orang Asal, remain stateless and are still awaiting approval to be recognised “merely as a Malaysian, even though they have ancestors who have lived and worked to develop the land.”
In a statement today, Bill Jugah, a member of Indigenous Peoples Movement for Self-Determination and Liberation (IPMSDL), questioned the speed with which Ragad was conferred her Bumiputera status.
“There are countless indigenous people born in Sarawak who are either stateless or not holding proper identification documents and they have been waiting for ages for their documents,” he said.
“Also, spouses of Sarawak citizens who have gone through arduous processes to obtain their permanent residency have waited for more than ten years without any word on their applications.
Bill said the case highlighted the fact that “those with access to power and influence” were able to circumvent procedures meant for the process of applying for citizenship as well as for Bumiputera status.
In normal procedures, a candidate has to undergo due and fair processes such as being proficient in the language of that race and practices or conforms to the customs and cultures of that particular community.
Some Sarawakians responded to the granting of Bumiputera status to Ragad with disbelief, while some said the move would hopefully set a precedent for other deserving Sarawakians to apply for their status.
“The state government has set a precedent,” said businessman Muthu Samy, who is married to a Bidayuh, and has a teenage son not considered as Bumiputera.
Under the national registration rule, the race of a child follows their father’s.
Muthu, who operates an Indian restaurant in Kuching, said he had for some years been pondering when to get his son the native status so he could inherit his mother’s native property.
“I’ve been told, and also hearing a lot from families and friends, the application process would be long and not easy.
“That’s the reason why I was never in a hurry.
“But the speed and ease in which Ragad, an Arab woman and her two Arab children got their Melanau Bumiputera status showed it could be done quickly,” he said.
“If foreigners can get the native status quickly and with ease, then my Sarawak-born, genuine half-Bumiputera son should get his even quicker,” Muthu, a second generation Sarawak-born Indian himself, told The Malaysian Insight.
“If not, then the government has just opened Pandora’s box.” – February 3, 2018.
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