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Berhad New Straits Times (Malaysia) Copyright 1995 New Straits Times Press (Malaysia) Berhad New Straits Times (Malaysia) September 8, 1995 SECTION: National; Pg. 2 LENGTH: 817 words HEADLINE: Bahaman Shamsuddin: An obituary BODY: IN August 1951, Bahaman Shamsuddin (later Tan Sri) believed that the then little known Tunku Abdul Rahman would be able to rescue Umno from a breach caused by the departure of the party's founder, Datuk Onn Jaafar. He fought to carry the State of Perak to the prince's nationalist side, helping to undercut support for Onn and secure his party's survival at its greatest hour of need. Bahaman supported the Tunku's bid for the presidency at the historic Umno general assembly of that year, and remained one of the Bapa Merdeka's most loyal political allies for the next 18 years. Umno has been formed five years previously to resist the Macmichael treaties and scotch the creation of the Malayan Union. After having achieved that, Bahaman believed it should then articulate the political aspirations of the Malay masses rather than remain as a largely elitist movement for the agitation towards independence. When Onn announced his intention of leaving Umno and forming the idealised, non-communalistic, Independence of Malaya Party (IMP), Bahaman told the Umno Seremban division a month earlier in July 1951: "The IMP is an association of the intelligentsia. But what about the masses, the ordinary people? "What is required is the real leadership of the people, not the intelligentsia." After a 53-minute valedictory speech, Onn relinquished the party presidency in what was hailed, ominously for Umno, as "a blaze of glory". As Onn stood poised to take a majority of the educated Malay elite with him, his former party tottered on the verge of obsolescence. But Bahaman, along with a core of ranking Malay Civil Service (MCS) members who subverted their colonial masters and helmed a grassroots movement towards independence, remained loyal to the Umno creed. "Umno, which was formed for uplifting and assisting the Malays, should carry on," he told his co-delegates as he pledged his vote to the Tunku. Born in Kuala Pilah, Negri Sembilan on Sept 14, 1906, Bahaman served the civil service in Perak since 1937. He joined Umno in his home State but when the Tunku took him into the top caucus, as a member of the party executive committee (the precursor of the supreme council) at the 1951 general assembly, it was in recognition of his experience in Perak, where his political skill was badly needed. Perak Umno was about to cleave off the main body of the party in support of Onn. By the end of 1953 the Tunku had acted, with Bahaman's active role, to dissolve and re-form the State division after removing its rebellious leaders. Rather than Onn's single party solution, the Tunku's route to unifying Malaya's racial plurality was a multi-party coalition which accommodated the political realities of the time. Following a pact with the MCA, Bahaman was named in October 1954 as one of the 15 from Umno to form the Umno-MCA Alliance Council to contest the next year's first ever elections. The results of that plebiscite vindicated the Tunku's leadership. The Alliance swept the polls, completely trouncing the IMP. Bahaman won the constituency of Teluk Anson, having retired after 30 years in Government service. In the first post-Merdeka general election, he returned to his home district and was elected to Parliament as the member for Kuala Pilah. Bahaman entered the Cabinet as soon as independence was achieved, first as Minister of Natural Resources, then as Minister of Labour in 1959. The responsibility for Social Welfare was added to his portfolio in 1962. After retaining Kuala Pilah in the 1964 elections, he was appointed Health Minister which became, over a span of four years, the most productive phase of his Cabinet career. He began when Malaysian health standards reflected the extent of rural poverty then prevalent. In addition to starting off the infrastructure of health services, the most urgent tasks of his ministry were the control of malaria and tuberculosis - now virtually non-existent - and a campaign against malnutrition and high mortality - neither of which is applicable today. In March 1968, the 62-year-old Bahaman took on the Justice Ministry in the last leg of his political life. A little over a year later, he retired from active politics, declaring his conviction in the continued viability of a multi-party Alliance, which was later to re-consolidate itself into the present-day Barisan Nasional. "After all, I was one of the founder members of the party. I will continue to work for the Alliance," he said. He was to out-live the Tunku, whose funeral he attended in December 1990. "He was good. His heart was pure and he was a friend," he said of the first Prime Minister. He was conferred the Panglima Mangku Negara, which carries the title Tan Sri, in June 1990, but was too infirm to attend the investiture. He was presented with the award at his home. LOAD-DATE: March 4, 1999 .
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