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Malayan Communist Party

The Malayan Communist Party (MCP), officially the Communist Party of Malaya (CPM), was a Marxist–Leninist and anti-imperialist communist party which was active in British Malaya and later, the modern states of Malaysia and Singapore from 1930 to 1989. It was responsible for the creation of both the Malayan Peoples' Anti-Japanese Army and the Malayan National Liberation Army.

Communist Party of Malaya
Malay nameParti Komunis Malaya
ڤرتي کومونيس ملايا
Chinese name馬來亞共產黨
马来亚共产党
Má-lâi-a Kiōng-sán-tóng
Maa5 Loi4 Aa3 Gung6 Caan2 Dong2
Mǎláiyǎ Gòngchǎndǎng
Tamil nameமலாயா பொதுவுடைமை கட்சி
Malāyā Kamyūṉisṭ Kaṭci
AbbreviationMCP, CPM, PKM
Founders
  • Lei Kuang-juan
  • Wu Ching
  • Wei Ching-chow
  • Lin Ching-chung
  • Chen Shao-chang
FoundedApril 1930 (1930-04)
Dissolved2 December 1989 (1989-12-02)
Preceded bySouth Seas Communist Party
NewspaperMin Sheng Pau
Paramilitary wing
Membership (1939)40,000
Ideology
Political positionFar-left
Colours  Red
Slogan"Kaum buruh semua negeri, bersatulah!"
("Workers of the world, unite!")
Party flag

The party led resistance efforts against the Japanese occupation of Malaya and Singapore during World War II, and later fought a war of national liberation against the British Empire during the Malayan Emergency. After the departure of British colonial forces from the Federation of Malaya, the party fought in a third guerrilla campaign against both the Malaysian and Singaporean governments in an attempt to create a communist state in the region, before disbanding in 1989.[2] Today, due to historical connotations surrounding the MCP, communism as an ideology remains a taboo political topic in both countries.

History edit

Early Influences edit

The communist movement actually appeared in Pahang earlier around the middle of the 1920s. At that time, the Communist Youth League was formed in the Chinese settlement centers such as in Raub, Bentong, Mentakab and Manchis. The followers of this movement are mostly made up of Chinese students who are in their teens and early twenties. They have been taught the ideals of communism by some of their teachers and are usually encouraged to show opposition to capitalism, colonial oppression and western imperialism in their public meetings and discussion groups.[3]

Formation edit

In April 1930 the South Seas Communist Party was dissolved and was replaced by the Communist Party of Malaya.[4] While its primary responsibility was Malaya and Singapore, the party was also active in Thailand and the Dutch East Indies, which did not then have their own Communist parties.

Growth edit

The party operated as an illegal organisation under British colonial rule. On 29 April 1930, a raid conducted by the Singapore Special Branch on a vacant house at 24 Nassim Road in Singapore almost ended the MCP as eight of its original founding members were arrested before being imprisoned or deported back to China.[5] In June 1931, after a Comintern courier was intercepted by the police, about six raids were conducted from June to December saw several party members were arrested and documents seized, sending the party into disarray. Information extracted from the courier indicated at this point there were 1,500 members and 10,000 sympathisers.[6]

Despite this setback, the MCP gained influence in the trade union movement and organised several strikes, most notably at the Batu Arang coal mine in 1935. They also set up workers' committees at some workplaces. These committees, and the strikes, were promptly crushed by troops and police. Many ethnic Chinese strikers were deported to China, where they were often executed by the Chinese Nationalist government as Communists.[7]

After Japan invaded China in 1937, there was a rapprochement between the Malayan Kuomintang and Communists, paralleling that in China. Under the wing of the Kuomintang, the MCP was able to operate more easily. Anti-Japanese sentiment among Malayan Chinese gave the party a great opportunity to recruit members and raise funds under the banner of defence of China.[8]

At this time, the party was infiltrated by an apparent British agent, Lai Teck, who became its Secretary-General in April 1939. Despite this severe security breach, the Party continued to operate effectively. By mid-1939 it claimed about 40,000 members, about half in Singapore.

Structure edit

The MCP was headed by a Central Executive Committee of twelve to fifteen members. About six of these were appointed to the Political Bureau (Politburo) which ran the party when the C.E.C was not in session. Each State had State Central Executive Committee and was in turn subdivided into several Districts. The smallest unit of organisation was the Party cell, which typically consisted of the members from one workplace or village. Large Party Congresses were held on an occasional basis.

World War II edit

On 8 December 1941, the Japanese Empire invaded Malaya. The British colonial authorities now accepted the MCP's standing offer of military co-operation. On 15 December, all left-wing political prisoners were released.

From 20 December the British military began to train party members in guerilla warfare at the hastily established 101st Special Training School (101st STS) in Singapore. About 165 MCP members were trained before the British defences collapsed. These fighters, scantily armed and equipped by the hard-pressed British, hurriedly dispersed and attempted to harass the occupying army.

Just before Singapore fell to the Japanese on 15 February 1942, the party began organising armed resistance in the state of Johore. Soon four armed groups, which became known as 'Regiments', were formed, with 101st STS trainees serving as nuclei. In March this force was dubbed the Malayan People's Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA) and began sabotage and ambushes against the Japanese. The Japanese responded with reprisals against Chinese civilians. These reprisals, coupled with increasing economic hardship, caused large numbers of Malayan Chinese to flee the cities. They became squatters at the forest margins, where they became the main source of recruits, food, and other assistance for the MPAJA. The MPAJA consolidated this support by providing protection.

O'Ballance estimates that in mid-1942 the regimental strengths were about 100 in the first Regiment, 160 in the 2nd, 360 in the 3rd, and 250 in the 4th.[9] At this time a 5th, 6th, and 7th Regiment were formed. This army, which included women, was conceived as both a military and political force, along Maoist lines.

When Singapore fell, Lai Teck was arrested by the Japanese and became their agent. On 1 September 1942, acting on his information, the Japanese launched a dawn raid on a secret conference of more than 100 MCP and MPAJA leaders at the Batu Caves just north of Kuala Lumpur, killing most. The loss of personnel forced the MPAJA to abandon its political commissar system, and the military commanders became the heads of the regiments.[10] Following this setback the MPAJA avoided engagements and concentrated on consolidation, amassing 4,500 soldiers by Spring 1943.[11]

From May 1943, British commandos from Force 136 infiltrated Malaya and made contact with the guerillas. Early in 1944 an agreement was reached whereby the MPAJA would accept some direction from the Allied South East Asia Command (SEAC) and the Allies would give the MPAJA weapons and supplies. It was not until the spring of 1945, however, that significant amounts of material began to arrive by air drop.[12]

The war's aftermath edit

Japan's surrender on 15 August 1945 caught the combatants in Malaya by surprise. The first British contingent of reoccupation troops did not arrive until 3 September; Singapore was reoccupied only on the 8th. The Japanese garrison withdrew from the countryside, leaving a power vacuum that was filled by the MPAJA. In many places, especially Chinese areas, they were greeted as heroes as they emerged from the forest.

The British recognised the MPAJA's authority, paying its soldiers for the role in the reoccupation. The guerillas, meanwhile, seized Japanese arms and recruited freely, forming an 8th Regiment and lifting their armed strength over 6,000.[13] At the same time they launched reprisals against collaborators in the Malay police force and the civilian population[13] and began to forcibly raise funds.[14]

Many in the rank and file advocated revolution.[15] The cautious approach which was favoured by Lai Teck and a majority of the leadership prevailed—a decision which was later viewed as a major missed opportunity.[16]

On 12 September the British Military Administration (BMA) was installed at Kuala Lumpur.[16] Later that year MPAJA reluctantly agreed to disband. Weapons were handed in at ceremonies where the wartime role of the army was praised.[17] Six thousand eight-hundred soldiers were officially disbanded, but a proportion of weapons were withheld, particularly handguns.[18] The party was still not legal but able to operate without repression.

The MCP adopted a 'National Front' policy, building a broad coalition to work for national independence within legal means. Due to bad economic conditions, the BMA was immediately faced with strikes and demonstrations in which the Communists played an active part. Several were put down by armed force and leaders banished. The MCP also exerted influence through parliamentary parties such as the Malayan Democratic Union (MDU) and the Malay Nationalist Party (MNP).[19]

In 1946, amid a discontent with the leadership's cautious line, an investigation commenced into rumours of Lai Teck's treachery.[20] Before he could be questioned in March 1947, Lai Teck fled the country with party funds.[20] Badly shaken, the Central Executive Committee kept the defection secret for a year while they struggled to come to terms with it.[21] The 26-year-old Chin Peng was chosen as the new Secretary General. A senior officer in the MPAJA 5th Regiment in Perak, he had been the party's principal liaison with Force 136. The party's stance became more resolutely anti-British.

Malayan Emergency edit

 
The Party's office before the Emergency.

Amid a rising atmosphere of tension, the government outlawed the burgeoning trade union federations on 12 June 1948. Then on 16 June they declared a state of emergency after three European planters were murdered by Communists in Perak state. The police were given sweeping powers of arrest, and punishments including the death penalty could be administered without an ordinary trial.

In the two weeks following hundreds of MCP members were arrested, and the party was declared illegal on 23 July. Party militants regrouped in the jungle as the Malayan Peoples' Anti-British Army (MPABA), many ex-MPAJA personnel. The initial commander, Lau Yew, was killed in action on 16 July. Chin Peng narrowly escaped arrest and rejoined his comrades with difficulty.

During this period the MCP also engaged in intimidation, including assassination, of civilians with the aim of coercing material aid, information, and silence. This policy contributed to a loss in popular support and was repudiated by the CEC in September 1951.

On 1 February 1949 the MPABA changed its name to 'Malayan National Liberation Army' (MNLA) and The party began to campaign for a Peoples' Democratic Republic of Malaya, which included Singapore.[22]

The MPLA had a General Headquarters controlled by a Central Military Committee which consisted of the politburo and some of the MPLA's regimental commanders and political officers. The most influential members of the politburo were Chin Peng, Yeung Kwo and Lau Lee.[22] At this point the army had about 4000 soldiers, about 10% women. It was divided into ten Regiments, nine of which were predominantly Chinese and one of which was composed mostly of Malays and Indians. The latter was successfully eliminated by the British who wished to confine the insurgency to the Chinese community.[23]

A civilian organisation called the Min Yuen supported the MPLA, collecting supplies and information.[24]

The MPLA lived in jungle or forest camps similar to—or even the same as—to those which the MPAJA had used.[25] By mid 1950 they, with the help of the Min Yuen, had acquired uniforms. These were of either khaki or jungle green British pattern.[26] The MPAJA and MPLA usually wore three stars on their caps, signifying the three races of Malaya.

Road or rail ambushes were favoured by the guerrillas, averaging about 17 per month from September 1949 to February 1950, and 56 per month from then until September 1950, peaking at 100 in the latter month.[27]

To prevent peasants, particularly squatters, from aiding the guerrillas, the British commenced relocation, which became a major component of British strategy under the Briggs Plan of 1950. By the mid-1950s about 500,000 people (roughly 10% of Malaya's population) had been moved into compounds, termed 'New Villages', which were surrounded by high barbed wire fences and guarded by police. On mines and estates, employees did not face relocation but merely 'regroupment' into guarded compounds on site. About 650,000 people were regrouped in this manner.

In addition, in June 1951, a general food-control program called 'Operation Starvation' was instituted. In 'food restricted areas', eating was only permitted at home, not at cafes and restaurants or workplaces. Shop keepers had to keep strict account of all food sold, and canned goods had to be punctured at time of sale to necessitate their being used promptly.[28] Widespread burning of villages suspected of Communist sympathies was also common in the early years.[29]

As a military strategy, these restrictive measures were highly successful. By 1953 the MPLA was often short of food and its numbers declined.[30] Faced with failure to establish any 'Liberated Areas', MCP renewed its work with trade unions and political parties.[31] The MPLA, for its part, began to increasingly rely on Malaya's aboriginal population for support. Internment of Aborigines was abandoned after mass deaths, and the government instead adopted strategy of offering the aborigines' aid and building forts in aborigine territory.[32]

In July 1955 Malaya's first general elections took place, with Tunku Abdul Rahman becoming Chief Minister.[33] One of his first acts was to declare a partial amnesty.[33] The amnesty remained in place until 8 February 1956 but resulted in only 73 surrenders.[34]

On 24 September 1955 Chin Peng wrote to Rahman offering to negotiate peace. This was accepted and on 17 October two government representatives, Too Joon Hing, an Assistant Minister of Education, and I.S. Wylie, the Deputy Commissioner of the Federation police, met Chin Peng and another member of the MCP Central Executive Committee at Klian Intan.[35] Two further meetings followed in November.

On 24 December the MCP released a new 'Eight Point Program' which called for an end to the Emergency Regulations, a cessation of hostilities, reform of Malaya's political system, democratic rights, support for world peace, and attention to other matters including education, health, welfare, and industrial production.

The negotiations culminated in the Baling meeting on 28 and 29 December 1955. Representing the Government were Tunku Abdul Rahman, David Marshall, Chief Minister of Singapore, and Sir Cheng Lock Tan, leader of the Malayan Chinese Association (MCA). For the MCP were Chin Peng Chen Tian, and Abdul Rashid bin Maidin. Chin Peng wanted legal recognition of the MCP and a return to the pre-conflict situation. The Government demanded the dissolution of the MCP, and the talks broke down.

In 1956 Chin Peng wrote to Tunku Abdul Rahman offering to resume negotiations. This was rejected by Rahman in a broadcast on 2 April.

In April 1957, Hor Lung, a Politburo member in charge of the Southern operations of the MPLA since 1953, was bribed to surrender to the security forces.[36]

By July 1957, about 30,000 square miles (approximately 78,000 km²) out of Malaya's total area of 50,850 square miles (approximately 130,000 km²) had been declared by the government as 'White Areas' – areas where the MPLA had essentially been eliminated and the Emergency Regulations withdrawn.[37] In August 1957, Kuala Lumpur and district were declared 'White'. By mid 1958 the MPLA existed mainly in Perak and the Southern part of Johore.[38] By early 1959 the MPLA was active only around the Thai border.

Meanwhile, on 31 August 1957, Malaya became independent from Britain. Tunku Abdul Rahman became Prime Minister. The Director of Operations against the insurrection, however, remained a British General, namely Lieutenant-General Archibald Cassels.

On 31 July 1960 the government formally declared that the 'Emergency' was over. However, Emergency restrictions remained in place in the area near the Thailand border.

Post-1960 period edit

In the mid 1960s the US State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 2000.[39]

The Communist guerrilla force, with a strength of about 500, continued to subsist on either side of the Thailand border. Meanwhile, Chin Peng and other cadre in China had limited contact with the jungle bases. From 1969 they launched a radio station in Hunan called "Suara Revolusi Malaya" (Voice of the Malayan Revolution), broadcasting to supporters in Malaysia and Singapore. This was shut down in 1981 at the request of Deng Xiaoping.[40]

Also in 1969, in response to the intensification of the Vietnam War and the Cultural Revolution in China, the party stepped up armed struggle. In 1970, however, the bases in Thailand were convulsed by the trials and executions of supposed spies.

Two breakaway factions, namely the Communist Party of Malaya/Marxist-Leninist and the Communist Party of Malaya/Revolutionary Faction, formed and condemned the purge.

Chin Peng subsequently denied involvement and rehabilitated his accused comrades.[41]In 1983, the breakaway factions merged with each other to form the short-lived Communist Party of Malaysia, which surrendered in 1987.

In 1989, the CPM itself finally laid down its arms. On 2 December, at the town of Had Yai in Southern Thailand, Chin Peng, Rashid Maidin, and Abdullah C. D. met with representatives of the Malaysian and Thai governments. Separate peace agreements were signed between the CPM and both governments.

MCP manifestos edit

From time to time the MCP released policy statements or manifestos to the public.

  • 1940. Manifesto calling for expulsion of British imperialism.[42]
  • February 1943. Anti-Japanese Programme (nine points).[42]
  • 27 August 1945. Eight Point Manifesto. Generally moderate; the only demands objected to by the British were those for an elected assembly and a wide franchise. It "expressed the hope" (Cheah's words) that the British would consider granting self-government to Malaya.[43]
  • 7 November 1945. MCP put six proposals to the BMA. At least one of them went beyond 27 August points: a demand for self-government. This included asking that Malaya be allowed to control its own national defence and foreign relations. Other demands were for less government interference with freedom of speech, publication and assembly, increases of wages, and an end to restrictions on trade, travel and transportation.[44]

MCP newspapers edit

  • Charn Yew Pau (‘Combattants' Friend’). Published for the MPAJA Ex-Service Comrades.
  • MCP Review. Was active in at least May 1948, when it carried a feature on the 'Peasants Struggle in Perak'.
  • Min Pao. Published in Seremban. It was closed by the government in 1946.
  • Min Sheng Pau. Has been called the 'voice of the MCP'. It was Malaya's largest Chinese-language daily newspaper. In early June 1948 it tried to move its printing machinery and newsprint into the jungle. It was the MCP's largest financial asset on the peninsula. Its editor, Liew Yit Fan, was arrested 9 June 1948 for sedition.
  • Sin Min Chu ('New Democracy'). Founded late 1945 or early 1946.[45]

Prominent members edit

  • Chin Peng. Secretary-General from 1947 to his death in 2013.
  • Yeung Kwo. Deputy General Secretary from 1947 till his death in 1956. Played a large role in the investigation against Lai Teck.
  • Lee An Tong. Successor of Yeung Kwo as Deputy Secretary General. Elected as member of Central Executive Committee in 1946.[46]
  • Chang Ling-Yun. CPM leader based in Beijing from 1953 - 1964. Secretary of the North Malayan Bureau of the Malayan Communist Party from 1964 - 1989.[47]
  • Lai Teck (Loi Tak). Secretary-General from 1939 to 1947. British and Japanese triple agent.
  • Wahi Annuar (Anwar). Took to the forests at the beginning of the emergency. Was a leader in the MPLA 10th Regiment. Surrendered in February 1950.[48]
  • R. G. Balan. Was in MPAJA. Attended Empire Communist Conference in London. Organised the Perak Rubber Labourers Union after his return from the Conference (c. 1948). It was a rival to John Emmanuel's government-sponsored faction of the Perak Estates Employees Union. Balan's union was very active from the beginning of 1948 until the emergency was declared. Balan was arrested 30 or 31 May 1948.
  • Abdullah CD. Also in the Malay Nationalist Party (MNP). Went into the jungle when the emergency was instituted. Became CPM chairman. One of the three MCP signatories at Hat Yai, 1989. He lived beyond his 100th birthday.
  • Shamsiah Fakeh. the leader of Angkatan Wanita Sedar (AWAS), Malaysia's first nationalist women's organisation and a prominent Malay leader of the Communist Party of Malaya.
  • Suriani Abdullah. Member of Perak State organisation and wife of Abdullah CD. In November 1945, she defended Lai Teck against rumours of disloyalty.
  • S. A. Ganapathy. Before World War II, he was a member of the Indian Communist Party, Malaya. During the period of Japanese rule, he joined the Indian National Army (INA). While in the INA he resumed his Communist affiliation and late in the War was arrested by the Japanese for Communist propagandising. After the War, he became President of the Pan Malayan General Labour Union (PMGLU), and President of the Pan Malayan Federation of Trade Unions (PMFTU). At the beginning of the emergency, he joined the guerrilla. He was arrested in May 1949 and hanged for possession of a pistol.
  • Lau Mah. Aliases: Ah Chung, Chin Wei Seong. Secretary of MPAJA 5th Regiment, Perak, in at least 1945. Member of the MCP Central Executive Committee. Killed by security forces in Perak, December 1949.[49]
  • Lau Yew (Liu Yau). Probably the MCP's most skilled military commander. Chairman of the Central Military Committee of the MPAJA. President of the MPAJA Ex-Service Comrades Association. Head of the MPABA. Killed by government forces in Selangor, 16 July 1948.
  • Lee Soong (Lee Siong). MCP representative at the Calcutta Youth Conference, 1948.
  • Liew Yit Fan. Political Secretary of MPAJA 2nd Regiment. 'Open' representative of MCP in mid 1947. Editor of Min Sheng Pao, largest Chinese-language newspaper in the Federation. Arrested 9 June 1948 for sedition.[50]
  • Lin Ah Liang. Head of the Singapore branch of the MCP in at least 1946.
  • Chen Tien. Head of the MCP's Central Propaganda Department and a representative of MCP during the Baling Talks
  • Abdul Rashid bin Maidin. Attended the 'Empire' communist conference in London. May have met Ahmad Boestaman in May and early June 1948 to plan an insurrection to begin in 1950. Arrested at the beginning of the emergency but sprung from a camp in Malacca. One of the three MCP signatories at Hat Yai, 1989.
  • Soon Kwong. General Secretary of the Selangor MPAJU. He was arrested on 12 October 1945 and charged with extortion committed 10 September 1945. His arrest, and to a lesser extent that of several MPAJA and MPAJU officials before that, prompted a large anti-government demonstration.
  • Wu Tien Wang. MCP representative on the British-convoked Singapore Advisory Council, 1945.
  • Eu Chooi Yip: A brilliant graduate of Raffles College, he was the key leader of MCP (Singapore). Was the superior of "The Plen" (Fong Chong Pik)
  • Fong Chong Pik: One of the key leader of CPM (Singapore)
  • Kamarulzaman Teh: former leader of Angkatan Pemuda Insaf (API) whom fought the Japanese during the Japanese Occupation in Malaya.[51]
  • Mohd Yatim Ayob: former communist fighter at Kg. Bharu, Telaga Nenas, Manjung, Perak.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Lee, T. H. (1996). The Basic Aims or Objectives of the Malayan Communist Movement. In T. H. Lee, The Open United Front: The Communist Struggle in Singapore (pp. 2-29). Singapore : South Seas Society.
  2. ^ "Chin Peng, an obituary". 4 October 2013.
  3. ^ Chinese Society Rural in Malaysia, Siaw L. K. L. 1983 : 66 - 68 p. 23.
  4. ^ O'Ballance, p. 23.
  5. ^ "SOUTH SEAS "REDS" IN MALAYA". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  6. ^ O'Ballance, p. 24.
  7. ^ O'Ballance, p. 25.
  8. ^ O'Ballance, p. 28.
  9. ^ P. 44.
  10. ^ O'Ballance, p. 49.
  11. ^ O'Ballance, p. 50.
  12. ^ Cheah, pp. 74, 75; Short, p. 24.
  13. ^ a b O'Ballance, p. 61.
  14. ^ See Cheah, pp. 252, 253, 261, 262.
  15. ^ O'Ballance, pp. 62, 63.
  16. ^ a b O'Ballance, p. 63.
  17. ^ O'Ballance, p. 65.
  18. ^ Short, p. 36.
  19. ^ Cheah, p. 248.
  20. ^ a b Short, p. 39.
  21. ^ O'Ballance, p. 73; Short, p. 41.
  22. ^ a b O'Ballance, p. 89.
  23. ^ O'Ballance, p. 100; Short, pp. 208, 209.
  24. ^ O'Ballance, p. 92.
  25. ^ P. 104.
  26. ^ O'Ballance, pp. 105, 106.
  27. ^ Short, pp. 206, 211, 212.
  28. ^ O'Ballance, pp. 112, 121.
  29. ^ Short, pp. 110, 153, 154, 163–8.
  30. ^ O'Ballance, p. 136; Short, p. 350; Coates, Suppressing Insurgency, p. 55.
  31. ^ O'Ballance, pp. 112, 113, 140, 141.
  32. ^ Sandhu, pp. 166, 167.
  33. ^ a b O'Ballance, p. 150.
  34. ^ O'Ballance, p. 154.
  35. ^ O'Ballance, p. 152.
  36. ^ O'Ballance, p. 160.
  37. ^ O'Ballance, p. 158.
  38. ^ O'Ballance, p. 161.
  39. ^ Benjamin, Roger W.; Kautsky, John H.. Communism and Economic Development, in The American Political Science Review, Vol. 62, No. 1. (Mar. 1968), pp. 122.
  40. ^ Chin Peng, My Side of History, pp. 450, 457–460.
  41. ^ Chin Peng, My Side of History, pp. 466–469, 499.
  42. ^ a b Short, p. 23.
  43. ^ Cheah, pp. 242, 243; O'Ballance, pp. 67, 153.
  44. ^ Cheah, p. 243.
  45. ^ Cheah, p. 244.
  46. ^ "马来亚共产党中央委员会副总书记李安东(老谢)同志". www.of21.com. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  47. ^ "我党我军杰出的领导人张凌云同志". www.of21.com. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  48. ^ Short, p. 209.
  49. ^ Short, p. 206.
  50. ^ Short, p. 60.
  51. ^ "Malaysia's longest political detainee, a fighter to the very end". 7 November 2002.

Sources edit

  • Cheah, Boon Kheng (2003). Red Star over Malaya: resistance and social conflict during and after the Japanese occupation of Malaya, 1941–1946. Singapore: Singapore University Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-274-2.
  • Chin, C. C., and Karl Hack. eds., Dialogues with Chin Peng: New Light on the Malayan Communist Party. (2004) Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2004 ISBN 9971-69-287-2
  • Chin, Peng (2003). Alias Chin Peng: My Side of History. Singapore: Media Masters. ISBN 978-981-04-8693-8.
  • O'Ballance, Edgar (1966). Malaya: The Communist Insurgent War, 1948–1960. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books.
  • Rashid, Maidin (2009). . Petaling Jaya, Malaysia: Strategic Information and Research Development Centre. ISBN 978-983-3782-72-7. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  • Singh Sandhu, Kernial (1964). "The Saga of the 'Squatter' in Malaya". Journal of Southeast Asian History. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. 5: 143–177. doi:10.1017/S0217781100002258.
  • Short, Anthony (1975). The Communist Insurrection in Malaya, 1948–1960. London: Frederick Muller. ISBN 0-584-10157-0.

malayan, communist, party, officially, communist, party, malaya, marxist, leninist, anti, imperialist, communist, party, which, active, british, malaya, later, modern, states, malaysia, singapore, from, 1930, 1989, responsible, creation, both, malayan, peoples. The Malayan Communist Party MCP officially the Communist Party of Malaya CPM was a Marxist Leninist and anti imperialist communist party which was active in British Malaya and later the modern states of Malaysia and Singapore from 1930 to 1989 It was responsible for the creation of both the Malayan Peoples Anti Japanese Army and the Malayan National Liberation Army Communist Party of MalayaMalay nameParti Komunis Malaya ڤرتي کومونيس ملايا Chinese name馬來亞共產黨 马来亚共产党 Ma lai a Kiōng san tong Maa5 Loi4 Aa3 Gung6 Caan2 Dong2 Mǎlaiyǎ GongchǎndǎngTamil nameமல ய ப த வ ட ம கட ச Malaya Kamyuṉisṭ KaṭciAbbreviationMCP CPM PKMFoundersLei Kuang juanWu ChingWei Ching chowLin Ching chungChen Shao changFoundedApril 1930 1930 04 Dissolved2 December 1989 1989 12 02 Preceded bySouth Seas Communist PartyNewspaperMin Sheng PauParamilitary wing Malayan Peoples Anti Japanese Army 1 Malayan National Liberation ArmyMembership 1939 40 000IdeologyCommunismMarxism LeninismMao Zedong ThoughtAnti imperialismPolitical positionFar leftColours RedSlogan Kaum buruh semua negeri bersatulah Workers of the world unite Party flagPolitics of MalaysiaPolitical partiesElectionsThe party led resistance efforts against the Japanese occupation of Malaya and Singapore during World War II and later fought a war of national liberation against the British Empire during the Malayan Emergency After the departure of British colonial forces from the Federation of Malaya the party fought in a third guerrilla campaign against both the Malaysian and Singaporean governments in an attempt to create a communist state in the region before disbanding in 1989 2 Today due to historical connotations surrounding the MCP communism as an ideology remains a taboo political topic in both countries Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Influences 1 2 Formation 1 3 Growth 1 4 Structure 1 5 World War II 1 6 The war s aftermath 1 7 Malayan Emergency 1 8 Post 1960 period 2 MCP manifestos 3 MCP newspapers 4 Prominent members 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesHistory editEarly Influences edit The communist movement actually appeared in Pahang earlier around the middle of the 1920s At that time the Communist Youth League was formed in the Chinese settlement centers such as in Raub Bentong Mentakab and Manchis The followers of this movement are mostly made up of Chinese students who are in their teens and early twenties They have been taught the ideals of communism by some of their teachers and are usually encouraged to show opposition to capitalism colonial oppression and western imperialism in their public meetings and discussion groups 3 Formation edit In April 1930 the South Seas Communist Party was dissolved and was replaced by the Communist Party of Malaya 4 While its primary responsibility was Malaya and Singapore the party was also active in Thailand and the Dutch East Indies which did not then have their own Communist parties Growth edit The party operated as an illegal organisation under British colonial rule On 29 April 1930 a raid conducted by the Singapore Special Branch on a vacant house at 24 Nassim Road in Singapore almost ended the MCP as eight of its original founding members were arrested before being imprisoned or deported back to China 5 In June 1931 after a Comintern courier was intercepted by the police about six raids were conducted from June to December saw several party members were arrested and documents seized sending the party into disarray Information extracted from the courier indicated at this point there were 1 500 members and 10 000 sympathisers 6 Despite this setback the MCP gained influence in the trade union movement and organised several strikes most notably at the Batu Arang coal mine in 1935 They also set up workers committees at some workplaces These committees and the strikes were promptly crushed by troops and police Many ethnic Chinese strikers were deported to China where they were often executed by the Chinese Nationalist government as Communists 7 After Japan invaded China in 1937 there was a rapprochement between the Malayan Kuomintang and Communists paralleling that in China Under the wing of the Kuomintang the MCP was able to operate more easily Anti Japanese sentiment among Malayan Chinese gave the party a great opportunity to recruit members and raise funds under the banner of defence of China 8 At this time the party was infiltrated by an apparent British agent Lai Teck who became its Secretary General in April 1939 Despite this severe security breach the Party continued to operate effectively By mid 1939 it claimed about 40 000 members about half in Singapore Structure edit The MCP was headed by a Central Executive Committee of twelve to fifteen members About six of these were appointed to the Political Bureau Politburo which ran the party when the C E C was not in session Each State had State Central Executive Committee and was in turn subdivided into several Districts The smallest unit of organisation was the Party cell which typically consisted of the members from one workplace or village Large Party Congresses were held on an occasional basis World War II edit On 8 December 1941 the Japanese Empire invaded Malaya The British colonial authorities now accepted the MCP s standing offer of military co operation On 15 December all left wing political prisoners were released From 20 December the British military began to train party members in guerilla warfare at the hastily established 101st Special Training School 101st STS in Singapore About 165 MCP members were trained before the British defences collapsed These fighters scantily armed and equipped by the hard pressed British hurriedly dispersed and attempted to harass the occupying army Just before Singapore fell to the Japanese on 15 February 1942 the party began organising armed resistance in the state of Johore Soon four armed groups which became known as Regiments were formed with 101st STS trainees serving as nuclei In March this force was dubbed the Malayan People s Anti Japanese Army MPAJA and began sabotage and ambushes against the Japanese The Japanese responded with reprisals against Chinese civilians These reprisals coupled with increasing economic hardship caused large numbers of Malayan Chinese to flee the cities They became squatters at the forest margins where they became the main source of recruits food and other assistance for the MPAJA The MPAJA consolidated this support by providing protection O Ballance estimates that in mid 1942 the regimental strengths were about 100 in the first Regiment 160 in the 2nd 360 in the 3rd and 250 in the 4th 9 At this time a 5th 6th and 7th Regiment were formed This army which included women was conceived as both a military and political force along Maoist lines When Singapore fell Lai Teck was arrested by the Japanese and became their agent On 1 September 1942 acting on his information the Japanese launched a dawn raid on a secret conference of more than 100 MCP and MPAJA leaders at the Batu Caves just north of Kuala Lumpur killing most The loss of personnel forced the MPAJA to abandon its political commissar system and the military commanders became the heads of the regiments 10 Following this setback the MPAJA avoided engagements and concentrated on consolidation amassing 4 500 soldiers by Spring 1943 11 From May 1943 British commandos from Force 136 infiltrated Malaya and made contact with the guerillas Early in 1944 an agreement was reached whereby the MPAJA would accept some direction from the Allied South East Asia Command SEAC and the Allies would give the MPAJA weapons and supplies It was not until the spring of 1945 however that significant amounts of material began to arrive by air drop 12 The war s aftermath edit Japan s surrender on 15 August 1945 caught the combatants in Malaya by surprise The first British contingent of reoccupation troops did not arrive until 3 September Singapore was reoccupied only on the 8th The Japanese garrison withdrew from the countryside leaving a power vacuum that was filled by the MPAJA In many places especially Chinese areas they were greeted as heroes as they emerged from the forest The British recognised the MPAJA s authority paying its soldiers for the role in the reoccupation The guerillas meanwhile seized Japanese arms and recruited freely forming an 8th Regiment and lifting their armed strength over 6 000 13 At the same time they launched reprisals against collaborators in the Malay police force and the civilian population 13 and began to forcibly raise funds 14 Many in the rank and file advocated revolution 15 The cautious approach which was favoured by Lai Teck and a majority of the leadership prevailed a decision which was later viewed as a major missed opportunity 16 On 12 September the British Military Administration BMA was installed at Kuala Lumpur 16 Later that year MPAJA reluctantly agreed to disband Weapons were handed in at ceremonies where the wartime role of the army was praised 17 Six thousand eight hundred soldiers were officially disbanded but a proportion of weapons were withheld particularly handguns 18 The party was still not legal but able to operate without repression The MCP adopted a National Front policy building a broad coalition to work for national independence within legal means Due to bad economic conditions the BMA was immediately faced with strikes and demonstrations in which the Communists played an active part Several were put down by armed force and leaders banished The MCP also exerted influence through parliamentary parties such as the Malayan Democratic Union MDU and the Malay Nationalist Party MNP 19 In 1946 amid a discontent with the leadership s cautious line an investigation commenced into rumours of Lai Teck s treachery 20 Before he could be questioned in March 1947 Lai Teck fled the country with party funds 20 Badly shaken the Central Executive Committee kept the defection secret for a year while they struggled to come to terms with it 21 The 26 year old Chin Peng was chosen as the new Secretary General A senior officer in the MPAJA 5th Regiment in Perak he had been the party s principal liaison with Force 136 The party s stance became more resolutely anti British Malayan Emergency edit Main article Malayan Emergency nbsp The Party s office before the Emergency Amid a rising atmosphere of tension the government outlawed the burgeoning trade union federations on 12 June 1948 Then on 16 June they declared a state of emergency after three European planters were murdered by Communists in Perak state The police were given sweeping powers of arrest and punishments including the death penalty could be administered without an ordinary trial In the two weeks following hundreds of MCP members were arrested and the party was declared illegal on 23 July Party militants regrouped in the jungle as the Malayan Peoples Anti British Army MPABA many ex MPAJA personnel The initial commander Lau Yew was killed in action on 16 July Chin Peng narrowly escaped arrest and rejoined his comrades with difficulty During this period the MCP also engaged in intimidation including assassination of civilians with the aim of coercing material aid information and silence This policy contributed to a loss in popular support and was repudiated by the CEC in September 1951 On 1 February 1949 the MPABA changed its name to Malayan National Liberation Army MNLA and The party began to campaign for a Peoples Democratic Republic of Malaya which included Singapore 22 The MPLA had a General Headquarters controlled by a Central Military Committee which consisted of the politburo and some of the MPLA s regimental commanders and political officers The most influential members of the politburo were Chin Peng Yeung Kwo and Lau Lee 22 At this point the army had about 4000 soldiers about 10 women It was divided into ten Regiments nine of which were predominantly Chinese and one of which was composed mostly of Malays and Indians The latter was successfully eliminated by the British who wished to confine the insurgency to the Chinese community 23 A civilian organisation called the Min Yuen supported the MPLA collecting supplies and information 24 The MPLA lived in jungle or forest camps similar to or even the same as to those which the MPAJA had used 25 By mid 1950 they with the help of the Min Yuen had acquired uniforms These were of either khaki or jungle green British pattern 26 The MPAJA and MPLA usually wore three stars on their caps signifying the three races of Malaya Road or rail ambushes were favoured by the guerrillas averaging about 17 per month from September 1949 to February 1950 and 56 per month from then until September 1950 peaking at 100 in the latter month 27 To prevent peasants particularly squatters from aiding the guerrillas the British commenced relocation which became a major component of British strategy under the Briggs Plan of 1950 By the mid 1950s about 500 000 people roughly 10 of Malaya s population had been moved into compounds termed New Villages which were surrounded by high barbed wire fences and guarded by police On mines and estates employees did not face relocation but merely regroupment into guarded compounds on site About 650 000 people were regrouped in this manner In addition in June 1951 a general food control program called Operation Starvation was instituted In food restricted areas eating was only permitted at home not at cafes and restaurants or workplaces Shop keepers had to keep strict account of all food sold and canned goods had to be punctured at time of sale to necessitate their being used promptly 28 Widespread burning of villages suspected of Communist sympathies was also common in the early years 29 As a military strategy these restrictive measures were highly successful By 1953 the MPLA was often short of food and its numbers declined 30 Faced with failure to establish any Liberated Areas MCP renewed its work with trade unions and political parties 31 The MPLA for its part began to increasingly rely on Malaya s aboriginal population for support Internment of Aborigines was abandoned after mass deaths and the government instead adopted strategy of offering the aborigines aid and building forts in aborigine territory 32 In July 1955 Malaya s first general elections took place with Tunku Abdul Rahman becoming Chief Minister 33 One of his first acts was to declare a partial amnesty 33 The amnesty remained in place until 8 February 1956 but resulted in only 73 surrenders 34 On 24 September 1955 Chin Peng wrote to Rahman offering to negotiate peace This was accepted and on 17 October two government representatives Too Joon Hing an Assistant Minister of Education and I S Wylie the Deputy Commissioner of the Federation police met Chin Peng and another member of the MCP Central Executive Committee at Klian Intan 35 Two further meetings followed in November On 24 December the MCP released a new Eight Point Program which called for an end to the Emergency Regulations a cessation of hostilities reform of Malaya s political system democratic rights support for world peace and attention to other matters including education health welfare and industrial production The negotiations culminated in the Baling meeting on 28 and 29 December 1955 Representing the Government were Tunku Abdul Rahman David Marshall Chief Minister of Singapore and Sir Cheng Lock Tan leader of the Malayan Chinese Association MCA For the MCP were Chin Peng Chen Tian and Abdul Rashid bin Maidin Chin Peng wanted legal recognition of the MCP and a return to the pre conflict situation The Government demanded the dissolution of the MCP and the talks broke down In 1956 Chin Peng wrote to Tunku Abdul Rahman offering to resume negotiations This was rejected by Rahman in a broadcast on 2 April In April 1957 Hor Lung a Politburo member in charge of the Southern operations of the MPLA since 1953 was bribed to surrender to the security forces 36 By July 1957 about 30 000 square miles approximately 78 000 km out of Malaya s total area of 50 850 square miles approximately 130 000 km had been declared by the government as White Areas areas where the MPLA had essentially been eliminated and the Emergency Regulations withdrawn 37 In August 1957 Kuala Lumpur and district were declared White By mid 1958 the MPLA existed mainly in Perak and the Southern part of Johore 38 By early 1959 the MPLA was active only around the Thai border Meanwhile on 31 August 1957 Malaya became independent from Britain Tunku Abdul Rahman became Prime Minister The Director of Operations against the insurrection however remained a British General namely Lieutenant General Archibald Cassels On 31 July 1960 the government formally declared that the Emergency was over However Emergency restrictions remained in place in the area near the Thailand border Post 1960 period edit Main article Communist insurgency in Malaysia 1968 89 In the mid 1960s the US State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 2000 39 The Communist guerrilla force with a strength of about 500 continued to subsist on either side of the Thailand border Meanwhile Chin Peng and other cadre in China had limited contact with the jungle bases From 1969 they launched a radio station in Hunan called Suara Revolusi Malaya Voice of the Malayan Revolution broadcasting to supporters in Malaysia and Singapore This was shut down in 1981 at the request of Deng Xiaoping 40 Also in 1969 in response to the intensification of the Vietnam War and the Cultural Revolution in China the party stepped up armed struggle In 1970 however the bases in Thailand were convulsed by the trials and executions of supposed spies Two breakaway factions namely the Communist Party of Malaya Marxist Leninist and the Communist Party of Malaya Revolutionary Faction formed and condemned the purge Chin Peng subsequently denied involvement and rehabilitated his accused comrades 41 In 1983 the breakaway factions merged with each other to form the short lived Communist Party of Malaysia which surrendered in 1987 In 1989 the CPM itself finally laid down its arms On 2 December at the town of Had Yai in Southern Thailand Chin Peng Rashid Maidin and Abdullah C D met with representatives of the Malaysian and Thai governments Separate peace agreements were signed between the CPM and both governments MCP manifestos editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2019 From time to time the MCP released policy statements or manifestos to the public 1940 Manifesto calling for expulsion of British imperialism 42 February 1943 Anti Japanese Programme nine points 42 27 August 1945 Eight Point Manifesto Generally moderate the only demands objected to by the British were those for an elected assembly and a wide franchise It expressed the hope Cheah s words that the British would consider granting self government to Malaya 43 7 November 1945 MCP put six proposals to the BMA At least one of them went beyond 27 August points a demand for self government This included asking that Malaya be allowed to control its own national defence and foreign relations Other demands were for less government interference with freedom of speech publication and assembly increases of wages and an end to restrictions on trade travel and transportation 44 MCP newspapers editCharn Yew Pau Combattants Friend Published for the MPAJA Ex Service Comrades MCP Review Was active in at least May 1948 when it carried a feature on the Peasants Struggle in Perak Min Pao Published in Seremban It was closed by the government in 1946 Min Sheng Pau Has been called the voice of the MCP It was Malaya s largest Chinese language daily newspaper In early June 1948 it tried to move its printing machinery and newsprint into the jungle It was the MCP s largest financial asset on the peninsula Its editor Liew Yit Fan was arrested 9 June 1948 for sedition Sin Min Chu New Democracy Founded late 1945 or early 1946 45 Prominent members editChin Peng Secretary General from 1947 to his death in 2013 Yeung Kwo Deputy General Secretary from 1947 till his death in 1956 Played a large role in the investigation against Lai Teck Lee An Tong Successor of Yeung Kwo as Deputy Secretary General Elected as member of Central Executive Committee in 1946 46 Chang Ling Yun CPM leader based in Beijing from 1953 1964 Secretary of the North Malayan Bureau of the Malayan Communist Party from 1964 1989 47 Lai Teck Loi Tak Secretary General from 1939 to 1947 British and Japanese triple agent Wahi Annuar Anwar Took to the forests at the beginning of the emergency Was a leader in the MPLA 10th Regiment Surrendered in February 1950 48 R G Balan Was in MPAJA Attended Empire Communist Conference in London Organised the Perak Rubber Labourers Union after his return from the Conference c 1948 It was a rival to John Emmanuel s government sponsored faction of the Perak Estates Employees Union Balan s union was very active from the beginning of 1948 until the emergency was declared Balan was arrested 30 or 31 May 1948 Abdullah CD Also in the Malay Nationalist Party MNP Went into the jungle when the emergency was instituted Became CPM chairman One of the three MCP signatories at Hat Yai 1989 He lived beyond his 100th birthday Shamsiah Fakeh the leader of Angkatan Wanita Sedar AWAS Malaysia s first nationalist women s organisation and a prominent Malay leader of the Communist Party of Malaya Suriani Abdullah Member of Perak State organisation and wife of Abdullah CD In November 1945 she defended Lai Teck against rumours of disloyalty S A Ganapathy Before World War II he was a member of the Indian Communist Party Malaya During the period of Japanese rule he joined the Indian National Army INA While in the INA he resumed his Communist affiliation and late in the War was arrested by the Japanese for Communist propagandising After the War he became President of the Pan Malayan General Labour Union PMGLU and President of the Pan Malayan Federation of Trade Unions PMFTU At the beginning of the emergency he joined the guerrilla He was arrested in May 1949 and hanged for possession of a pistol Lau Mah Aliases Ah Chung Chin Wei Seong Secretary of MPAJA 5th Regiment Perak in at least 1945 Member of the MCP Central Executive Committee Killed by security forces in Perak December 1949 49 Lau Yew Liu Yau Probably the MCP s most skilled military commander Chairman of the Central Military Committee of the MPAJA President of the MPAJA Ex Service Comrades Association Head of the MPABA Killed by government forces in Selangor 16 July 1948 Lee Soong Lee Siong MCP representative at the Calcutta Youth Conference 1948 Liew Yit Fan Political Secretary of MPAJA 2nd Regiment Open representative of MCP in mid 1947 Editor of Min Sheng Pao largest Chinese language newspaper in the Federation Arrested 9 June 1948 for sedition 50 Lin Ah Liang Head of the Singapore branch of the MCP in at least 1946 Chen Tien Head of the MCP s Central Propaganda Department and a representative of MCP during the Baling Talks Abdul Rashid bin Maidin Attended the Empire communist conference in London May have met Ahmad Boestaman in May and early June 1948 to plan an insurrection to begin in 1950 Arrested at the beginning of the emergency but sprung from a camp in Malacca One of the three MCP signatories at Hat Yai 1989 Soon Kwong General Secretary of the Selangor MPAJU He was arrested on 12 October 1945 and charged with extortion committed 10 September 1945 His arrest and to a lesser extent that of several MPAJA and MPAJU officials before that prompted a large anti government demonstration Wu Tien Wang MCP representative on the British convoked Singapore Advisory Council 1945 Eu Chooi Yip A brilliant graduate of Raffles College he was the key leader of MCP Singapore Was the superior of The Plen Fong Chong Pik Fong Chong Pik One of the key leader of CPM Singapore Kamarulzaman Teh former leader of Angkatan Pemuda Insaf API whom fought the Japanese during the Japanese Occupation in Malaya 51 Mohd Yatim Ayob former communist fighter at Kg Bharu Telaga Nenas Manjung Perak See also editList of political parties in Malaysia Malayan Communist Party Marxist Leninist Communist Party of Indonesia Malaysian Communist Party Malayan Communist Party Revolutionary Faction North Kalimantan Communist PartyReferences editCitations edit Lee T H 1996 The Basic Aims or Objectives of the Malayan Communist Movement In T H Lee The Open United Front The Communist Struggle in Singapore pp 2 29 Singapore South Seas Society Chin Peng an obituary 4 October 2013 Chinese Society Rural in Malaysia Siaw L K L 1983 66 68 p 23 O Ballance p 23 SOUTH SEAS REDS IN MALAYA eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 10 January 2021 O Ballance p 24 O Ballance p 25 O Ballance p 28 P 44 O Ballance p 49 O Ballance p 50 Cheah pp 74 75 Short p 24 a b O Ballance p 61 See Cheah pp 252 253 261 262 O Ballance pp 62 63 a b O Ballance p 63 O Ballance p 65 Short p 36 Cheah p 248 a b Short p 39 O Ballance p 73 Short p 41 a b O Ballance p 89 O Ballance p 100 Short pp 208 209 O Ballance p 92 P 104 O Ballance pp 105 106 Short pp 206 211 212 O Ballance pp 112 121 Short pp 110 153 154 163 8 O Ballance p 136 Short p 350 Coates Suppressing Insurgency p 55 O Ballance pp 112 113 140 141 Sandhu pp 166 167 a b O Ballance p 150 O Ballance p 154 O Ballance p 152 O Ballance p 160 O Ballance p 158 O Ballance p 161 Benjamin Roger W Kautsky John H Communism and Economic Development in The American Political Science Review Vol 62 No 1 Mar 1968 pp 122 Chin Peng My Side of History pp 450 457 460 Chin Peng My Side of History pp 466 469 499 a b Short p 23 Cheah pp 242 243 O Ballance pp 67 153 Cheah p 243 Cheah p 244 马来亚共产党中央委员会副总书记李安东 老谢 同志 www of21 com Retrieved 26 July 2023 我党我军杰出的领导人张凌云同志 www of21 com Retrieved 26 July 2023 Short p 209 Short p 206 Short p 60 Malaysia s longest political detainee a fighter to the very end 7 November 2002 Sources edit Cheah Boon Kheng 2003 Red Star over Malaya resistance and social conflict during and after the Japanese occupation of Malaya 1941 1946 Singapore Singapore University Press ISBN 978 9971 69 274 2 Chin C C and Karl Hack eds Dialogues with Chin Peng New Light on the Malayan Communist Party 2004 Singapore Singapore University Press 2004 ISBN 9971 69 287 2 Chin Peng 2003 Alias Chin Peng My Side of History Singapore Media Masters ISBN 978 981 04 8693 8 O Ballance Edgar 1966 Malaya The Communist Insurgent War 1948 1960 Hamden Connecticut Archon Books Rashid Maidin 2009 Memoirs of Rashid Maidin From Armed Struggle to Peace Petaling Jaya Malaysia Strategic Information and Research Development Centre ISBN 978 983 3782 72 7 Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2010 Singh Sandhu Kernial 1964 The Saga of the Squatter in Malaya Journal of Southeast Asian History Cambridge England Cambridge University Press 5 143 177 doi 10 1017 S0217781100002258 Short Anthony 1975 The Communist Insurrection in Malaya 1948 1960 London Frederick Muller ISBN 0 584 10157 0 Portals nbsp Communism nbsp History nbsp Malaysia nbsp Singapore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malayan Communist Party amp oldid 1184951117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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