Open Letter to Curtin University, WA
Posted by kim on Friday, February 17, 2012 Under: Smart & Logic
I
would like to
refer to your
recent media
release on
Curtin
University's
Honorary
Doctorate of
Letters award
to Rosmah
Mansor, dated
13 February
2012, found
here: http://news.curtin.edu.au/media-releases/curtin-award-recognises-wife-of-malaysian-prime-minister/
I
am an alumni
of Curtin
University,
having
completed a
bachelors and
masters
between the
years of 2003
and 2009, and
a proud alumni
at that. I am
also a
Malaysian
citizen, and I
am also an
Australian tax
payer for the
past 9 years.
Hence, Curtin
University's
decision to
award Rosmah
Mansor with a
Honorary
Doctorate
greatly
interests and
intrigues me
from both an
Australian and
Malaysian
perspective.
Julia/Pip,
To
start with, I
would like to
humbly point
out that
Rosmah Mansor
is NOT the
first lady of
Malaysia. The
official First
Lady of
Malaysia is
the Seri
Paduka Baginda
Raja
Permaisuri
Agong (Roughly
translated as
Her Majesty
The Queen)
Haminah
Hamidun. In
Malaysia, the
Queen takes
precedence
next after the
Yang
di-Pertuan
Agong (the
King) over all
other persons
in Malaysia.
Rosmah
Mansor does
not hold
office in the
government,
and she's
simply the
Prime
Minister's
wife. She is
as part of the
Malaysian
public as I
am. The
Malaysian
public will
greatly
appreciate if
you could
remove "First
Lady of
Malaysia"
title from
your media
release, and
issue another
addressing the
change.
Julia/Pip,
As
you might have
noticed, there
is currently a
barrage of
posts and
comments on
the official
Facebook page
of Curtin
University (to
which the
admins of that
page have now
resorted to
deletion of
posts) with
regards to
whether Rosmah
Mansor is the
rightful
recipient of
your
distinguished
Honorary
Doctorate.
This note's
purpose is to
provide a
represented
front for
those
comments, and
we would
greatly
appreciate if
you could
provide a
direct reply
to this note,
or issue a
media release
explaining
Curtin's
decision to
award Rosmah
Mansor.
You
cited Curtin's
reason to
award her as
her dedication
to education
and the
advancement of
women. You
also mentioned
how she is the
driving force
behind the Permata
project, and
explicitly
said:
As a result of her involvement, there are more than 600 Permata centres in Malaysia, and the program now extends to centres for talented and gifted children with special academic and musical abilities, and to children with special acumen in spiritual matters.
Permata
is a
government
funded agency.
Permata
receives
funding from
the government
i.e. the
Malaysian tax
payers money.
As such, it is
our right (as
Malaysians) to
demand such
services. With
or without
Rosmah,
Permata is our
right, not
Rosmah's
philanthropy.
It's a whole
different
story if
Rosmah used
her own money
- that's
philanthropy.
This
would be the
equivalent of
Julia
Gillard's
partner using
Australian tax
payer's money
to set up day
cares all over
Australia and
receives an
award from a
foreign
university for
his
philanthropical
work.
Malaysians
are partly
incised at
Permata
because it has
been abusing
tax payers
money. There's
rife
corruption,
over-funding,
safety and
responsibility
issues. Please
read here for
more details: http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/2011/12/12/permata-centre-wasnt-safe-for-my-child/
Curtin's
decision to
award Rosmah
has got
Malaysians
questioning.
1. How
was Rosmah's
contribution
and dedication
to education
evaluated?
Was there an
objective task
panel set up
to review
this?
2.
How was Rosmah's contribution to advancement of
women
evaluated?
3.
How much of an involvement in early education
centre does
one entitle to
an honorary
doctorate?
4.
How do the current Curtin PhD scholars feel about
all this?
I
certainly
believe that
Curtin
University
must have
carried out
extensive
research and
surveys to
recognise
Rosmah's
contribution,
Curtin being
known as an
excellent
research
institution.
Will Curtin
University
care to share
the full
findings to
the Malaysian
public, so
that we can
better
appreciate
Rosmah
Mansor?
It
is also worth
noting that
Malaysian
students make
up the second
largest number
at Curtin
University,
and Perth is
home to one of
Malaysia's
biggest
diaspora in
the world.
Curtin's
decision to
award Rosmah
is one of the
most talked
about subject
on the
Twitterverse,
blogosphere
and other
social medias.
We
would greatly
appreciate if
you can get
back to us on
this matter.
Thank you.
Thank you.
In : Smart & Logic