Malaysian Ceylonese Congress
Malaysian Ceylonese Congress | |
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Malay name | Kongres Ceylonese Malaysia كوڠݢريس سيلونيس مليسيا |
Tamil name | மலேசிய சிலோனீஸ் காங்கிரஸ் Malēciya Cilōṉīs Kāṅkiras |
Sinhalese name | මැලේසියානු ලංකා කොන්ග්රසය Mælēsiyānu Laṁkā Kongrasaya |
Abbreviation | MCC |
President | Mahendranathan Thuraiappah |
Secretary-General | Vijayaletsumi Tharuman |
Deputy President | Parameswaran Kasippilai |
Vice President | Rajeswari Kandiah |
Vice President | Sivamalar Subramaniam |
Vice President | Kantha Rasalingam |
Women's Chief | Rasamani Kandiah |
Founder | M. W. Navaratnam |
Founded | 1958 |
Preceded by | Selangor State Ceylonese Association (1900-1958) Malayan Ceylonese Congress (1958-1970) Malaysian Ceylonese Congress (since 1971) |
Headquarters | No.75-3A-1, Jalan Metro Perdana Barat 1, Taman Usahawan, Kepong Utara, 52100 Kuala Lumpur |
Dewan Negara: | 0 / 70 |
Dewan Rakyat: | 0 / 222 |
Dewan Undangan Negeri: | 0 / 587 |
Website | |
Official website | |
Malaysian Ceylonese Congress on Facebook |
This article is part of a series on the |
Politics of Malaysia |
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The Malaysian Ceylonese Congress (MCC; Malay: Kongres Ceylonese Malaysia, Tamil: மலேசிய சிலோனீஸ் காங்கிரஸ், Sinhala: මැලේසියානු ලංකා කොන්ග්රසය) is a political party in Malaysia.
Formation
[edit]Formed earlier in 1958 as Malayan Ceylonese Congress before it changed its name to Malaysian Ceylonese Congress in 1970, the MCC was established as a political party. MCC was initially originated from Selangor Ceylonese Association or Persatuan Ceylon Selangor founded in 1900, when the meeting of its members under leadership of M.W. Navaratnam in January 1958 decided to transformed the association status to a political party by changing its name and constitution to Malayan Ceylonese Congress. The brainchild of M.W Navaratnam, MCC was formed to promote and preserve the Political, Educational, Social and Cultural aspects of the Malaysians of Ceylonese origin, or Sri Lankan descent.[1]
MCC was hoping to join the Barisan Nasional (BN) and its predecessor Alliance coalition since the independence in 1957[2] despite debates that the Malaysian Ceylonese community should join the Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC), one of BN's major component party for the Malaysian Indians instead.[3] MCC used to have a Senator in the Dewan Negara; the Upper House of Parliament of Malaysia until 1981.[citation needed]
Before the 2018 general election (GE14) which saw the fall of BN ruling government, MCC indirectly had been supporting the BN coalition and was considered to be pro-BN. MCC was inclined to BN when the coalition was in power and had received aid from the BN ruling government then.[4]
President
[edit]To date, seven presidents have held office since 1958.[5][6]
- 1) M. W. Navaratnam (1958–1969)
- 2) C. Sinnadurai (1970–1983)
- 3) Tan Sri V. Jeyaratnam (1983–1987)
- 4) N. Arumugasamy (1988–1995)
- 5) Prof. Datuk Dr D.M. Thuraiappah (1996-2003)
- 6) NKS Tharmaseelan (2004–2017)
- 7) Mahendranathan Thuraiappah (2018-)
See also
[edit]- List of political parties in Malaysia
- Politics of Malaysia
- Barisan Nasional
- Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Official website (archive)
- Malaysian Ceylonese Congress - HQ on Facebook
- Malaysian Ceylonese Congress HQ Facebook Group
- Malaysian Ceylonese Congress Youth Facebook
- An Introduction to the Malaysian Ceylonese Community and the Malaysian Ceylonese Congress, by Dato' Dr. D.M. Thuraiappah, President of MCC, Penang Story
- MALAYSIAN CEYLONESE CONGRESS Muar Blogspot
- Ceylonese community receives RM2.5million aid
References
[edit]- ^ Indian based political parties, Bob Kee
- ^ Please stop the tirade, by Datuk Dr N.K.S. Tharmaseelan, 6 Nov 2006, New Straits Times
- ^ CEYLONESE TAGLINE CREATES CONFUSION, 13 June 2001, Malaysian National News Agency (Bernama)
- ^ Vijayakone (14 May 2012). "Ceylonese community receives RM2.5million aid". CJ.MY. Vijayakone. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
- ^ Vijayananthan, Dato' G (2006). "History of Malaysian Ceylonese Congress" (PDF). Malaysian Ceylonese Congress. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2010.
- ^ Kandiah, Rajeswari (31 July 2008). "Malaysian Ceylonese Congress turns 50 with glitter". The Star. Retrieved 24 April 2010.
- Political parties in Malaysia
- Political parties established in 1958
- 1958 establishments in Malaya
- Hindu political parties in Malaysia
- Sri Lankan diaspora in Malaysia
- Conservative parties in Malaysia
- Identity politics
- Indian-Malaysian culture
- Indian National Congress breakaway groups
- Political parties of minorities in Malaysia
- Political parties of the Indian diaspora