A war in all but name: expanding the timeline of conflict in the Malayan emergency

In 1948, the colonial administration in Malaya declared a state of emergency after three European planters were murdered on their estates in Sungai Siput. The Malayan Emergency to this day remains a highly contentious and politicized conflict, in which historians, governments, and those who fought i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ho, Benjamin
Other Authors: Florence Mok
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174463
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:In 1948, the colonial administration in Malaya declared a state of emergency after three European planters were murdered on their estates in Sungai Siput. The Malayan Emergency to this day remains a highly contentious and politicized conflict, in which historians, governments, and those who fought in it are eager to make sense of it all. A crucial area of contention in current histories and accounts of the Emergency are the factors that contributed to its start. Some narratives favour the influence of external factors like global and regional political movements, while others prefer to give precedence to local players in the Emergency. Either way, there seems to be an enormous weight given to an event that to the British, did not warrant being called a war or even civil war. This relegation of the Emergency to a simple conflict in terminology should in turn provoke questions about the root of conflict between the two sides. This essay aims to call in to question the credence given to the declaration of an Emergency as a starting point of a conflict between the Malayan Communist Party and the British. By instead beginning at the creation of the Malayan Communist Party in 1930, and using accounts and memoirs of those present, a better picture of a conflict that existed long before the Emergency can be formed. Ultimately, this should open questions about a broader timeline of the Emergency and its causes that is not narrowly focused on the events of 1948.