steadyaku47 comment : It is just past 7.43 AM here in Melbourne on a cold Winter morning. As cold as it is, I am still in my sarong and singlet...you can take the Melayu to Melbourne but you cannot take the Melayu out of the Melayu. The only concession I make to Winter is a cup of a very very hot Lipton tea - black....and I went to the link Sharmaine sent me last night...and came across this....the man my late father served under as Director of CID when my old man was in the Police....and also the man I know of as an old boy of my alma mater : MCKK : and the man I have met a few times in his office beside the Hilton Hotel in KL....and the man I last met at the 100 years MCKK Centenary celebrations in KK.
There is much I myself can write about him but enough is said here by his own son....and all I can add is "TABEK TUAN"....men like you Tun, are hard to come by these days....may you grace our nation with your presence for many more years to come.
And yes, my late Father, Hamid Latiff, is also a man I love dearly, miss dearly and is deserving of a "TABEK TUAN" from me....a son he did not see much of in his last days, but nevertheless a son who is always grateful and thankful for having a Father who, by example, had taught me what matters in life....FAMILY. Thank you Bapak.
The Patriot Father
Posted June 19, 2016 on:
A little over 50 years ago, Tun Razak persuaded my father who was then a
Special Branch staff officer in Bukit Aman, to accompany him to Bangkok
for the negotiations to end the confrontation with Indonesia. My father
was reluctant to leave my elder sister Juliana who was suffering from
Thallasemia Major and had been given not long to live. “Just one night,”
said Razak to my father.
It was during the negotiations with Adam Malik from Indonesia that my sister passed on. Tun Razak was told by his Aide-de-Camp of
the news and he quietly went up to his room and locked himself in. My
father knocked on the door to request permission to leave for Kuala
Lumpur, but Razak never opened the door. In the end, my father climbed
up the hotel wall and entered Razak’s room theough the window. Razak
quickly held a newspaper in front of his face, replying to my father’s
request only with a grunt. Razak was crying but did not want my father
to see.
My father has always put the nation before himself. He knew that his
first-hand information among others into the Kalabakan massacre of
members of the 1st Platoon, ‘A’ Coy of the 3rd Battalion Royal Malay
Regiment on the 29th December 1963 would come in handy during the
negotiations.
I, too, was a sickly child. Diagnosed with Thallasemia Minor, I also
suffered from Acute Glomerulonephritis. My father was the Officer
in-Charge of Police District (OCPD) in Ipoh when the 13th May 1969
tragedy broke out. Tun Razak instructed my father to report to the
National Operations Council (MAGERAN). With Ipoh being a
Chinese-majority town, my father felt it was important he defused the
situation in Ipoh first. He asked Razak to give him two days. With three
of his men, he went to a sawmill in Lahat where hundreds of Chinese,
armed to the teeth, had gathered. He persuaded them to put down their
weapons. The Chinese representatives told my father that Malays from the
surrounding kampungs were preparing to attack them and had sent
their families to seek protection at police stations – an advantage the
Chinese did not have. My father immediately called police stations under
his charge to evict the Malay families seeking refuge there. As a
result, the Malays did not attack the Chinese community in Lahat and a
potentially bloody tragedy was averted.
When we finally moved to KL to be with him, my father would carry me
on his shoulders in the middle of the night from our house jn Jalan
Bukit Guillemard (now Jalan Bukit Ledang) to the playground at the Lake
Gardens just to spend quality time with me. He did not want to miss any
opportunity like he did when my late sister was around.
All that ended abruptly on 8th June 1974, the day after his
predecessor was gunned down in cold blood near where the present Jalan
Raja Chulan meets Jalan Tun Perak the day before. He spent his life as a
police officer 20 years thereon combatting the communist terrorists,
visit frontliners to boost their morale, and console family members
whenever a policeman was killed.
When his brother Ainuddin passed away as a result of a motorcycle
accident in August 1975, my father was away in Sandakan due to a
critical situation. Tun Datu Hj Mustapha, the then Chief Minister of
Sabah, offered to send my father back in his private aircraft. Upon
arrival in KL, my father went straight to the Prime Minister’s residence
to report the situation.
When done, my father asked Tun Razak, “May I take an emergency leave for one day, sir?”
“What for?” asked Razak.
“My brother passed away yesterday and I want to attend his funeral today.”
Tun Razak was aghast, asked my father why didn’t he attend the
funeral first. Razak ordered an Air Force Allouette helicopter to fly my
father back to his hometown in Teluk Intan. He made it just in time for
the burial.
By the time he retired, his children were mostly married and had moved out.
My brother, the youngest in the family, passed on three years ago.
After visiting my brother’s grave, my father sat a while inside my car
and told me how he wished he was not the Inspector-General of Police so
he could see his children grow up. He lamented how he cannot remember
ever sleeping and hugging my late brother when he was little. I pointed
out to him that he had saved tens of thousands of lives by doing what he
did as the IGP. And due to the respect the police force still have for
him, my late brother was accorded an escorted police hearse which made
his final journey to his resting place smoother, and that at least 400
people joined during the jenazah prayer.
I don’t know if I managed to appease him. I hope I did. What he never
realised is that it is because of people like him, millions in Malaysia
still have a father to wish on this auspicious day.
But as a father, he still cries whenever he visits and recites the Surah Yaasiin at my brother’s grave. The IGP everyone knew him as, is just another father after all.
Happy Father’s Day, Ayah. You’ve sacrificed a lot for the nation and your children are proud of you nevertheless.
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