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Tuesday, January 7, 2020

SEREMBAN COUNCILLOR IMMEDIATELY HAULED UP BY COPS FOR ‘OFFENSIVE IMAGE’ OF ZAKIR NAIK – YET UNIMAP GETS AWAY UNSCATHED DESPITE OUTRAGING NON-MALAYS BY CALLING EXTREME PREACHER AN ‘ICON’

 Preacher Zakir Naik leaving Bukit Aman around 8.15pm in a black Toyota Innova after being interrogated for about seven hours by Bukit Aman CID (D5 Prosecution and Legal).
FIVE police reports have been lodged against Seremban City Council member K. Senthivelu for allegedly touching on the sensitivities of Muslims by uploading an offensive image of Indian preacher Zakir Naik on Facebook recently.
Seremban district police chief ACP Mohd Said Ibrahim said the police have opened an investigation paper and will call Senthivelu to record his statement.
Police are investigating the case under Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act for improper use of network facilities, he said yesterday. – Bernama

When UniMAP response to exam question begs more questions

UNIVERSITI Malaysia Perlis (UniMAP) fails to enlighten Malaysians, particularly academics and students, regarding its controversial exam paper on ethnic relations recently.
Defending the paper that hails Indian preacher Zakir Naik as an icon of the Muslim world, following public calls for accountability, UniMAP vice-chancellor R. Badlishah Ahmad insisted that there was nothing wrong with the question.
Indeed, there is something wrong with his response given that the university academics concerned had skewed answers to the exam question on Zakir in a way that only projects him as a personality beyond reproach and intellectual scrutiny.
In other words, the answers provided can be read as the question setters being insensitive to the sentiments of students, especially non-Muslim ones, whose communities have already had issues with the preacher.
But, as implied above, the problem with the paper is more than just the misinterpreted “bodoh”, because the way the answers are crafted suggests an element of ignorance, if not denseness, on the part of the setters regarding our social context.
To be clear, the exam setters, who were said to be multi-ethnic, have not taken into consideration that a question about Zakir that is framed in such a way is unsuitable, nay troubling, in a context where divisive politics is practised to the hilt by purveyors of ethnocentrism and religious bigotry in the country.
In other words, it was the exam setters that are out of sync with our social context. Contrary to what Badlishah claimed, the critics of the exam paper didn’t take the question out of context.
If this is the result of a conscious and careful vetting of exam questions by the exam setters, then they must have turned the term “vetting” on its head.
For the uninitiated, vetting normally require close scrutiny of the exam papers, looking out for misspellings as well as factual errors and questions that do not meet the overall objective of the course concerned.
The scrutiny of exam questions for a paper on ethnic relations should demand stringent inspection so as not to invite not only unnecessary misinterpretation that could lead to students losing marks, but also gives legitimacy to ethnic bigotry and religious extremism among students.
In an academic setting such as universities, it is imperative that exam questions set should help enlighten students about complex and intriguing issues, such as race and religion.
While academics ought to have the freedom to design their respective course structures, have their own pedagogy and set exam questions without the interference of the university authorities, it doesn’t necessarily mean that a serious misstep, such as the Zakir question, should make the authorities look the other way.
Similarly, university autonomy that was promoted by former education minister Maszlee Malik should not be interpreted that the university has the carte blanche to do almost anything it wishes without a care two hoots about serious criticism from academics and the general public.
For, this autonomy must be accompanied by accountability to academia as well as the general public, especially when there are issues that have social and political repercussions.
Let the nagging questions regarding the exam paper be answered adequately and responsibly through a thorough and independent investigation.
UniMAP will be doing a great service to itself if it makes this move. – THE MALAYSIAN INSIGHT
BERNAMA / THE MALAYSIAN INSIGHT

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