No News Is Bad News
This is more important for Anwar and his Madani Government than the RM1.5 trillion national debt.
Real face of Anwar and his Madani Government exposing like a sore thumb!
KUALA LUMPUR, OIct 27, 2023: Instead of paying all his attention, focus and energy in healing the country’s economy, Prime Minister and his Madani Government seem to be more concerned with not so urgent matters.
Instead of spending all his time and energy in healing from the RM1.5 trillion national debt, correspondence in English and allowing schools, teachers, schoolboys and girls, to brandish guns and weapons (promoting violence) in the cause of the Palestine are more important.
No News Is Bad News will not comment more on the matter and leave it to readers to form their own judgment on the news report below:
‘Malay only’ policy needs coordination with Bornean states, says ex-Sabah CM
Salleh Said Keruak says this is important to ensure the smooth implementation of the official language policy for the common good.
FMT Reporters - 26 Oct 2023, 11:10am
Former Sabah chief minister Salleh Said Keruak said he welcomes the ‘correspondence in Malay only’ policy, although the importance of mastering English as a global language ‘cannot be disputed’. (Bernama pic)
PETALING JAYA: Any policy requiring the use of Malay in official correspondence should “ideally” be coordinated with the Sabah and Sarawak governments, according to former Sabah chief minister Salleh Said Keruak.
Salleh said such coordination was important to ensure the smooth implementation of a policy for the common good.
“There is no denying that Malay is the national language in Malaysia and we welcome this policy, but the importance of mastering English cannot be disputed,” he said at the 2023 SMK Pekan student awards ceremony in Kota Belud today.
“This is because English, as a global language, is widely used and needs to be mastered, especially by civil servants dealing with foreign countries and students who will explore the field of knowledge in the field of education, and then apply it in the world of work.”
Yesterday, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim reminded local companies and universities to correspond with government agencies in Malay, noting that there had been a “deviation” from the constitutional commitment to uphold Malay as the national language.
Anwar also said that anyone who wrote in a language other than the national language “will have their letter returned”.
In response, Sarawak state secretary Abu Bakar Marzuki said the state has no intention to comply with the prime minister’s directive and will continue to accept official correspondence written in English from local companies or public and private institutions.
This is not the first time that Sarawak has held opposing views with the federal government when it comes to language-related policies.
In June last year, Sarawak premier Abang Johari Openg said the state civil service would continue to use English as the official language alongside the national language, Malay.
His comments were in response to chief secretary to the government Zuki Ali’s May 24 statement where he had wanted the public services department (JPA) to look into action that could be taken against those who did not take instructions to strengthen the national language seriously.
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