|
Malaysia's population is comprised of many ethnic
groups, with the politically dominant
Malays
making up the majority. By constitutional definition, all Malays are
Muslim.
About a quarter of the population are
Chinese,
who have historically played an important role in trade and business.
Malaysians of
Indian
descent comprise about 10% of the population and include
Hindus,
Muslims,
Sikhs,
Christians,
and
Buddhists.
About 90% of the Indian community is
Tamil
but various other groups are represented, including
Malayalis,
Punjabis
and
Telugus.
Non-Malay indigenous groups make up more than half of
the state of
Sarawak's
population, constitute about 66% of
Sabah's
population, and also exist in much smaller numbers on the Peninsula,
where they are collectively called
Orang Asli.
The non-Malay indigenous population is divided into dozens of ethnic
groups, but they share some general cultural similarities. Other
Malaysians also include those of, inter alia,
European,
Middle Eastern,
Cambodian,
and
Vietnamese
descent. Europeans and
Eurasians
include British who colonized and settled in Malaysia and some
Portuguese,
and most of the Middle Easterners are
Arabs.
A small number of Kampucheans and Vietnamese settled in Malaysia as
Vietnam War refugees. Population distribution is uneven, with some 20
million residents concentrated on the
Malay
Peninsula.
May 13,
1969
saw an incident of civil unrest which was then thought to be largely due
to the socio-economic imbalance of the country along racial lines,
though in retrospect it may have been more motivated by political
firebrands in both governing and opposition parties, as the violence
involved only the areas in and around the capital, with much of the
country remaining at peace. This incident led to the adoption of the
New Economic
Policy as a two-pronged approach to address racial and
economic inequality and to eradicate poverty in the country.
Due to the rise in labour intensive industries,
Malaysia has 10 to 20 percent foreign workers with the uncertainty due
in part to the large number of illegal workers; there are a million
legal foreign workers and perhaps another million unauthorized
foreigners. The state of Sabah alone has nearly 20% of its 2.5 million
population listed as illegal foreign workers in the last census.
Unauthorized foreigners are subject to RM10,000 fines and two-year
prison terms, while Malaysian employers face up to a year in jail and a
fine of up to RM50,000 for each illegal worker hired, with those hiring
more than five also liable to caning.
Caning
is a standard punishment for more than 40 crimes in Malaysia, ranging
from sexual abuse to drug use. Administered with a thick rattan stick,
it splits the skin and leaves scars.
Some 380,000 unauthorized foreigners left during an
"amnesty" that began in Fall 2004 and was extended several times. During
amnesties, unauthorized foreigners can leave without paying fines for
staying illegally in the country. On March 1, 2005, some 300,000
policemen as well as the 560,000-strong Peoples Volunteer Corp began
searching for the remaining unauthorized foreigners under Operation
Tegas; the volunteers receive RM100 for each foreigner arrested.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysia
|