Wars Involving Pre-Independence Malaysia - Malayan Emergency, Circumstances Prior to the Malayan Emergency, Baling Talks, Malayan Communist Party, Mili (Paperback)


Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Malayan Emergency, Circumstances prior to the Malayan Emergency, Baling Talks, Malayan Communist Party, Military history of New Zealand in Malaysia, Bukit Kepong Incident, Special Operations Volunteer Force, Larut War, Batang Kali massacre, Briggs' Plan, Klang War, Malayan Races Liberation Army, New Village, Policewoman of Malaysia, Jementah Civil War, Commission for the Pacification of Larut, Perak War. Excerpt: In 1948, the Communists and the British colonial government in Malaya entered a period of guerrilla fighting which has become known to history as the Malayan Emergency. The name derives from the state of emergency declared by the colonial administration in June 1948 to extend the powers of the police and military. The state of emergency was officially lifted in July 1960. In the broadest context, the events leading to the emergency include the following: This article focuses on the immediate antecedents to the Emergency, beginning shortly after the Japanese surrender and British reoccupation in August and September 1945. In September to December, 1945, General Labour Unions (GLU's) arose, sometimes with MCP guidance. They organised themselves as regional bodies rather than trade-specific bodies; this was consciously done in an effort to promote racial integration since particular racial groups tended to predominate in particular trades, eg.; Chinese in mines, Malays in the civil service, often Indians on plantations. A number of short strikes were held, not necessarily involving entire GLU's. They had little material result but demonstrated a capacity to act. There were considerable economic grounds for labour unrest. Real wages were below the pre-war level in 1948 compared to 1939 wages had risen about 3 times but the cost of living had gone up 4 times, so the real wage was about 3/4. Normal pre-war rice...

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Malayan Emergency, Circumstances prior to the Malayan Emergency, Baling Talks, Malayan Communist Party, Military history of New Zealand in Malaysia, Bukit Kepong Incident, Special Operations Volunteer Force, Larut War, Batang Kali massacre, Briggs' Plan, Klang War, Malayan Races Liberation Army, New Village, Policewoman of Malaysia, Jementah Civil War, Commission for the Pacification of Larut, Perak War. Excerpt: In 1948, the Communists and the British colonial government in Malaya entered a period of guerrilla fighting which has become known to history as the Malayan Emergency. The name derives from the state of emergency declared by the colonial administration in June 1948 to extend the powers of the police and military. The state of emergency was officially lifted in July 1960. In the broadest context, the events leading to the emergency include the following: This article focuses on the immediate antecedents to the Emergency, beginning shortly after the Japanese surrender and British reoccupation in August and September 1945. In September to December, 1945, General Labour Unions (GLU's) arose, sometimes with MCP guidance. They organised themselves as regional bodies rather than trade-specific bodies; this was consciously done in an effort to promote racial integration since particular racial groups tended to predominate in particular trades, eg.; Chinese in mines, Malays in the civil service, often Indians on plantations. A number of short strikes were held, not necessarily involving entire GLU's. They had little material result but demonstrated a capacity to act. There were considerable economic grounds for labour unrest. Real wages were below the pre-war level in 1948 compared to 1939 wages had risen about 3 times but the cost of living had gone up 4 times, so the real wage was about 3/4. Normal pre-war rice...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Booksllc.Net

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2014

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2014

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Editors

Creators

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 6mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

108

ISBN-13

978-1-158-01066-0

Barcode

9781158010660

Categories

LSN

1-158-01066-4



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