A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 17, 2019
Malaysia’s own ‘Game of Thrones’
The 16th King of Malaysia, the sixth Sultan of Pahang, Al-Sultan
Abdullah Ri'ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah Ibni Sultan Ahmad Shah
Al-Musta'in Billah, salutes beside Queen Tunku Hajah Azizah Aminah
Maimunah Iskandariah binti Al-Marhum Al-Mutawakkil Alallah Sultan
Iskandar Al-Haj, while Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad (C)
observes during the welcoming ceremony at the Parliament House in Kuala
Lumpur on January 31, 2019. Source: MOHD RASFAN / AFP

14 May at 18:33
AS IN earlier constitutional struggles in 1983 and 1993, Malaysia’s
federal government under Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad is confronting
the royal power and claimed prerogatives of the traditional rulers of
the federation’s nine sultanate states.
This struggle between the elected national government and the heads of
the precolonial Malay ruling houses now turns upon several intensely
contested issues.First, the ousting of the Johor chief minister and the
royal assertion of the right to nominate his successor.
Second, resistance by several of the sultans to the appointment of a
duly selected new chief justice. And third, opposition to Malaysia
acceding to the Statute of Rome treaty against war crimes, on the
grounds that doing so might diminish Malay royal sovereignty.
Such tensions are a constant feature of modern Malaysian political life.
As the standing of the once dominant Malay ruling party United Malays
National Organisation (UMNO) has waned since the 12th general election
(GE12) in 2008, the Malay sultans are increasingly playing a decisive
backstage political role. In the defence of ‘Malay interests’, they are
backed by a consortium of restless street-level Malay ethnocratic and
ethno-sectarian forces.
These forces are eager to make — on behalf of the sultans but in the
name of Malay supremacy — more expanded claims concerning the supposedly
imperilled constitutional standing of the Malay royals. And as former
prime minister Najib Razak stands trial on criminal charges,
he and his now sidelined UMNO party (with whom many of these
street-level forces are aligned) are joining the chorus upholding
threatened Malay power as personified by the sultans.
They do so with a common objective: political destabilisation. They aim
to undermine the recently elected Pakatan Harapan (PH) administration’s
political authority and its ability to govern.
But the issue has been in play well before 2008. Since independence in
1957, Malaysia has faced the problem — ripe for political agitation — of
the relation between national constitutional sovereignty and royal
prerogative. Does the Federal Constitution concede the old sultanate
royals any entitlements outside the Constitution and beyond its reach?
Does it give them any broad and far-reaching (as distinct from narrow
and technical) powers within the Constitution?

FILE PHOTO: Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad speaks during an
interview with Reuters in Putrajaya, Malaysia, March 30, 2017. Source:
Reuters
Historically, the answer is no. Like all the nations launched into
postcolonial independence after World War II, Malaya and then Malaysia’s
constitution rests upon the principle of popular national sovereignty.
But ethno-supremacist and Islamist ideologues have emerged in more
recent times asserting that the Constitution rests upon a different
foundation: the doctrine of Islamically-sanctified Malay domination in a
state governed by Sharia Law under Malay royal custodianship.
History tells its own story. After long opposing it, the old state Malay heads finally boarded the Merdeka (independence)
train moments before it left the Colonial Office station without them.
They suggested that independence was bestowed on the nation as their
gift of royal grace and favour, and that they had now reposed their
historic precolonial sovereignty within the new national political
entity under their continuing customary patronage.
Along with the new royalist theorists who have emerged over recent
years, they now argue that the precolonial sovereignty of the Malay
sultans had remained intact and undiminished during the years of
colonial rule, all the way back to 15th century Malacca. Their argument
artfully conflates — or fatally fails to distinguish between — daulat, the cosmically-grounded aura of sanctity that traditionally infused Malay kingship and the person of the ruler, and kedaulatan, a modern term expressing the abstract idea of sovereignty in its jurisprudential sense.
Centrally important in the ‘new royalist’ doctrine are the rights and obligations of Malaysia’s head of state — the king, or Agong —
as guarantor of the country’s Malay–Islamic authenticity. While the
royal heads of the nine sultanate states enjoy a historic cultural
standing that precedes the modern constitutions of their states, the
position of the Agong — elected
to five-year rotating terms by the nine rulers from among their own
ranks — has no such pre-independence history. It is an artefact purely
of the Federal Constitution itself, whose supremacy it is the Agong’s duty to personify and uphold.
Modern constitutional government is not merely government in accordance
with the provisions of a constitution, but also government in accordance
with the wishes of the elected representatives of the people. Yet in
Malaysia, ‘We the Ruler’ has become entangled with ‘We the People’, and
the attendant confusion has bedevilled Malaysian politics ever
since. Exploiting that confusion is the key strategy of the PH
government’s Malay adversaries.

Malaysia’s Dr Mahathir Mohamad (c) reacts as he walks into the
Parliament house flanked by Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng (L) and Deputy
Prime Minister Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail for the tabling of the 2019
budget. Source: Fandy Azlan/Department of Informationn/AFP
Today’s battles are today’s, but the conflict between the elected PH
government and royal power in Malaysia is driven by these historic
disputes.
Under Mahathir, PH amassed sufficient popular support to win GE14
in 2018. But the PH bloc lacks the coherence and resolve to govern
effectively. Should the PH government fail, there will be a terrible
resentment-driven reversion. The old Malay–Islamic forces will return to rule with replenished determination — and royal blessing.
PH does not know how to succeed. Seeing that, its opponents are seizing
opportunities — as in this clash over Malay royal power — to weaken it.
They pose the question: how can the PH government possibly survive to
win GE15 four years from now?
The idea of Malay royal power at the head of an increasingly Islamic
state is central to Malaysian politics today. It has enormous mobilising
power among a dominant yet resentful political majority with the
psychological mindset, and resulting fears, of a threatened minority.
Dr Clive Kessler is Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of New South Wales.
- This article has been republised from East Asia Forum under a Creative Commons license.



