Saturday, September 15, 2007

Lim: Unlawful directive against transfer

Lim: Unlawful directive against transfer
May 28, 07 1:28pm

The education ministry's policy to bar the transfer of pupils from
national to vernacular schools is both unconstitutional and unlawful,
said veteran DAP leader Lim Kit Siang.

The Education Act 1996 declares without any ambiguity that pupils are
to be educated in accordance with the wishes of their parents, he
pointed out in a statement.

Article 152 of the Federal Constitution, meanwhile, provides for the
inextinguishable right of any Malaysian to use - other than for
official purposes - any language other than Bahasa Malaysia.

"The cabinet on Wednesday should strike out Education Minister
Hishammuddin Hussein's directive under Section 8 of 1996 Education
Act in unlawfully and unconstitutionally barring national primary
school pupils from transferring to Tamil or Chinese primary schools.
although a reverse transfer is allowed," he said.

Lim was commenting on the plight of a home-maker in Perak whose
appeals to the state education department to approve her eight-year-
old son's transfer from a national school in Kuala Kangsar to a Tamil
vernacular school were rejected.

According to a report in The Star, her son and three other boys had
been caned by a teacher in a national primary school for turning up
late for an Arabic language class. The mother lodged a police report
in February.

Dissatisfied with the school's denial that it had forced any non-
Muslim student to attend the Arabic language classes, she placed her
son temporarily in a primary school in Kuala Kangsar while waiting
for approval for his transfer to a Tamil school.

Her request and two subsequent appeals were rejected by the state
education department on the grounds that the ministry bars transfers
from national schools to vernacular schools in order to encourage
racial integration.

"We advise the parents (of this pupil) to stay in the national
school. Whatever complaints you have, please come forward and we will
discuss them seriously," Perak education director Mohamed Zakaria
Mohd Noor reportedly said.

'Inviting challenges'

Conceding that the education minister has the power under Section 8
of the Education Act to issue policy directives and regulations to
give effect to the law, Lim said these powers are clearly limited
both by the enabling Act and the constitution.

While education officials can try to dissuade parents from
transferring their children from national primary schools to Tamil or
Chinese primary schools, they must respect the parents' right to make
the final decision, he said.

"The education minister and education department officials must
realise that, to deny parents their freedom of choice in education
recognised by the Education Act 1996 and the constitution, is both
unlawful and unconstitutional and invites constitutional challenges
in the courts," he said.

This is particularly pertinent, Lim added, as Malaysia bids for a
seat on the United Nations' Education, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation executive board at its 34th annual general meeting in
Paris in October.

"It would be most unfortunate if Hishammuddin's refusal to uphold and
respect the parental right to freedom of choice in education for
their children as spelt out in....international instruments and
declarations on the right to education of children becomes an
international issue putting Malaysia in the dock," he said.

Lim also urged MIC president S Samy Vellu and ministers from MCA,
Gerakan, SUPP, and other Barisan Nasional component parties to take a
common stand on this matter at the cabinet meeting.

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