International Women’s Day falls on March 8, but the women who have made
recent headlines in Malaysia do so for the wrong reasons.
They include self-styled ‘First Lady’ Rosmah Mansor, the Women, Family
and Community Development Minister Shahrizat Abdul Jalil, the ladies of
the Obedient Wives Club and the Tourism Minister Dr Ng Yen Yen, whose
latest brainwave is to turn taxi drivers into “tourism ambassadors”.
Perhaps, one of the taxi drivers should replace the high commissioner in London.
Last week, Ng (right)
said: “After they have been selected by our appointed judges, the taxi
drivers will be undergoing a one-day awareness course organised by the
ministry where we will explain to them their role as tourism
ambassadors.”
When Jean Todt, the husband of ex-Bond girl Michelle Yeoh, was made a
Malaysian ‘tourism ambassador’, he received an annual fee of RM593,000
and an allowance of RM388,000 towards his holidays in Malaysia.
Will the taxi drivers, our “tourism ambassadors”, be given similar
financial incentives? Or do “gwai lohs” get preferential treatment?
Ng wanted to improve the attitude of taxi drivers and be rid of shoddy
practices, like the refusal to use meters, which many locals and
tourists had complained about. So will they be satisfied with just a
fancy title?
She also wanted to promote Malaysia as a duty-free shopping destination
and praised the ‘1Malaysia GP Sale’ which promised ‘bargains-galore’ for
shoppers from March 10 to April 15.
If only Ng could persuade our self-styled ‘First Lady’ to make Malaysia
her ‘buyer’s paradise’. Whenever Rosmah is overseas, it is her shopping
exploits which overshadows the Prime Minster Najib Abdul Razak’s visits.
When she went to Saudi Arabia and Bangladesh in January 2011, the
secretive First Lady of Malaysia department received so much attention
that Najib appeares to have shut it down. Gone was the pink tinged
website that used to grace the official PM’s website.
Rural people lack basic infrastructure
If only the victims of domestic violence, incest and teenage pregnancies
could receive as much attention as the assorted coloured handbags and
multi-million ringgit gems that adorn the First Lady’s podgy wrist and
fingers.
Rosmah’s receipt of an honorary degree for education from Curtin
University in Australia became a viral sensation on Facebook. In the
past, Curtin was embroiled in the sex for degrees scandal; but one would
not dream of associating impropriety with honorary degrees.
It
must be nice receiving honorary degrees, unlike the children from the
Orang Asli community or the indigenous peoples of East Malaysia, where
receiving basic schooling is problematical.
Rural schools are poorly maintained and transportation is a problem. Despite the wealth from timber, oil and gas, these rural communities lack basic infrastructure. Curtin University
would do well to find out the reasons these places are poorly funded and
come up with solutions.
Many of us are barely surviving with the increase in food prices, petrol
prices, toll charges and utility bills. It is worse for rural
communities. Farmers struggle to feed their families and they spend even
less on their livestock.
Animals receive reduced amounts of fodder and some may not receive veterinary care.
Spending taxpayer’s money comes as second nature to most ministers and
Shahrizat Abdul Jalil’s family showed a great deal of finesse, when they
made good use of a RM250 million loan meant for the National Feedlot
Corporation project.
With great aplomb, they bought a string of luxury condominiums, a pilgrimage and the latest Mercedes-Benz car.
For many farmers, home is a wooden shack, transportation is a
dilapidated truck and dreams of going on the haj, remains just that-
dreams. At least Shahrizat has a choice of houses. The homes of the
Penan, which are located on ancestral lands, are now under water.
Sarawak Chief Minister Taib Mahmud’s vision of building mega-dams means
that the interior has to be flooded to generate cheap electricity which
his new aluminium smelters, will devour.
It is commendable that Shahrizat was able to protect her husband and
her three children, unlike the parents of the Penan girls who were raped
by loggers in the Sarawak jungles.
The women and children have nowhere to go and no-one to whom they can
turn for help. They have been called “good storytellers” and “liars who
often change their stories”.
If only Taib’s young wife, Ragad Waleed Alkurdi, would waddle out of her
palatial home ground to enquire why these Penan women are angry. They
have been stripped of their lands, an education and also their dignity.
Malaysian women certainly know how to grab the attention of the foreign
media - like the titillating details of the Obedient Wives Club’s
graphic sex manual.
No-one (in the west) appears to be interested in our corruption,
tainted judiciary, violent thugs, radioactive waste and baby dumping,
but sex sells. Especially deviant sex!
Despite setting a quota of 30 percent women in decision-making roles in
government and industry, Najib has failed miserably in empowering women.
With just Shahrizat and Ng as ministers, Najib’s cabinet is not female
friendly. Both women are seriously flawed.
If only capable women were in positions of responsibility, the country
might not be in such a state. But then why should men care? The rules
are made by men, for men.
Naturally, it is hard to talk about improving the country when the women
who should be good role models are busy promoting designer handbags and
rings, or collecting cows and condos.
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