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When manifestos stop mattering – Charles Santiago

Recognising the UEC is not about privileging one community, but about acknowledging educational plurality in a multiracial society

11:10 AM MYT

 


The debate over the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC) once again exposes the gap between principle and political expediency in Malaysia.

Despite repeated assurances during election campaigns, the government under Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim remains unwilling to move beyond ambiguity.

What was once framed as a question of fairness and educational merit has been reduced to delay and deflection, driven largely by anxiety over Malay sentiment.

This hesitation is especially glaring given that several states have already acted. Penang and Selangor officially recognise the UEC as an entry qualification for employment in state-owned companies and for admission into state-linked higher education institutions.

Sabah and Sarawak have also accepted the UEC for entry into their state-run universities. These decisions show that recognition is workable and compatible with national interests.

Pakatan Harapan did not come to power on vague promises. Its manifestos explicitly committed to recognising the UEC subject to reasonable conditions, including compliance with national education standards and Bahasa Malaysia requirements. Walking back this pledge is not pragmatism; it is a breach of trust.

Anwar’s continued hedging reflects a deeper failure of leadership. The UEC has long been misrepresented as a threat to Malay rights or national cohesion, despite the absence of evidence. Instead of confronting these myths, the government has chosen political caution over principled governance.

When a reformist coalition begins to mirror the politics it once opposed, its credibility erodes. Treating minority citizenship as conditional while appeasing manufactured insecurity is not national unity; it is managed inequality.

Recognising the UEC is not about privileging one community, but about acknowledging educational plurality in a multiracial society.

Leadership demands the courage to honour commitments and explain difficult decisions. If Pakatan Harapan wants to be remembered as a reformist government, it must keep the promises that brought it to power. – December 15, 2025

Charles Santiago is former Klang MP

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