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candu [2021/07/14 20:07] – [Peranan British] sazlicandu [2022/02/08 10:30] (kini) – [Candu di Tanah Melayu] sazli
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-====== Candu di Tanah Melayu ======+====== Candu di Malaya ======
  
 ===== Dirujuk oleh ===== ===== Dirujuk oleh =====
  
   * [[sejarahbangi-1910-1919#kedai_candu|1914-05-04: Kedai Candu]]   * [[sejarahbangi-1910-1919#kedai_candu|1914-05-04: Kedai Candu]]
 +  * [[rekoh|Rekoh]]
  
 ===== Perihal ===== ===== Perihal =====
Line 18: Line 19:
 ===== Peranan British ===== ===== Peranan British =====
  
-Mulai 1910, pihak British mula mengawal selia kegiatan importpenjualan, dan pengedaran candu di Tanah Melayu, serta mengenakan cukai ke atasnya. Mereka mendapat keuntungan lumayan secara terus-menerus di setiap peringkat: //"... In 1910the British Government took over the importation, sale and distribution of opiumThe Government licensed all retail shopswhile mine owners and other large employers of Chinese labour imported their own opium, converted it into chandu, and dispensed it to their own employeesAfter a good many years the Governmentin some states, collected their own taxes on opium, and while that policy did not make the slightest difference to the consumers, it enabled the Government to calculate this source of revenue for each successive period of three yearsThe Geneva Convention on Drugs held on the 19th day of February 1925, prompted the British to impose restrictions on the sale and consumption of opiumRegistered opium smokers or authorised consumers however continued to ‘enjoy’ this privilege. By 1929, the Federated Malay States had 52,313 registered opium users. A further restriction was imposed in 1934, as a result of a treaty signed in Bangkok on the use of opium. Only those who had a doctor’s recommendation were allowed to use it. By 1941, there were 75,000 opium users and it was estimated that the number of those who were not registered might well be double. After World War Two, the British prohibited the unauthorised use of opium. ... In order to prohibit the possession, use, manufacture, sale, and importation of dangerous drugs, the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1952 was promulgated by the High Commissioner with the consent of the Rulers in Council of the Federation of Malaya."// (Abdul Rani Kamarudin  Jurnal AADKJilid 12007: {{ :lampiran:adk-1-1.pdf ||}}[[https://www2.adk.gov.my/the-misuse-of-drugs-in-malaysia-past-and-present/|"The Misuse Of Drugs In Malaysia : Past And Present"]], m.s.5-6). +Selain industri candu itu sendirigejala tersebut turut menguntungkan pihak British, terutamanya ketika zaman pentadbiran Negeri-negeri Melayu Bersekutu (NNMB)melalui kutipan cukai dan sewa secara sistematik dan berpusat: //"Kemasukan berterusan buruh Cina menjadi suatu rahmat buat kerajaan NNMB apabila tabiat mencandu mereka digunakan sebagai instrumen yang dikenakan cukaiDalam mengaut keuntungan melalui candukerajaan British memperkenalkan Sistem Pajakan Hasil CanduDi bawah sistem inipihak kerajaan memperolehi hasil melalui pengenaan duti import ke atas candu mentah dan juga sewa pajakan ladang canduAntara tahun 1898 hingga 1907hasil candu menyumbang dari 9.1 peratus hingga 18.6 peratus daripada keseluruhan hasil pendapatan kerajaan NNMB."// (Jayakumary Marimuthu, Azmi Arifin E-PROCEEDINGS International Conference on SustainabilityHumanities and Civilization (ICSHAC)November 2018: {{ :lampiran:e_proceedings_international_conference_o.pdf ||}}[[https://www.academia.edu/43350749/E-PROCEEDINGS_International_Conference_on_Sustainability_Humanities_and_Civilization_ICSHAC_2018|"PEMBANTERASAN TABIAT MENCANDU DAN PERANAN GERAKAN ANTI-CANDU DI NNMB SEBELUM TAHUN 1910"]], m.s.35-36).
  
-Berikutan Konvensyen Geneva 1925ia mula dihentikan secara beransur-ansursehingga dilarang sepenuhnya dalam Akta Dadah Merbahaya 1952: //"Malayaas it was then knownwas being carved-out of the rugged terrain and jungles in the early 19th centuryIn opening up the country and developing its tin mines, rubber and pepper estates, the British brought in huge numbers of Chinese and Indian workers into Malaya to work in the tin minesrubber plantations and pepper estates respectivelyThe Chinese were the first people who introduced into the country the habit of opium smokingEmployment in the new country brought them enough money to spareThere was some period of leisure after a gruelling day’s workbut there were no amenities with which they could occupy themselvesMost of them had left their families behind in their homelandOpium smoking thus became one of the outletsSome smoked it as a medicineto cure aches and pains and ward off diseases (opium was believed to have a beneficial effect on tuberculosis of the lungs, diarrhoea, and malaria). At that timeit was not considered harmful and there was no restriction or taboos as to its usageIt has been recorded that opium consumption among some of the Chinese in Singapore and the Straits Settlements was evident since 1867. ... In 1910, the British Government took over the importation, sale and distribution of opium. The Government licensed all retail shops, while mine owners and other large employers of Chinese labour imported their own opium, converted it into chandu, and dispensed it to their own employees. After a good many years the Government, in some states, collected their own taxes on opium, and while that policy did not make the slightest difference to the consumers, it enabled the Government to calculate this source of revenue for each successive period of three years. The Geneva Convention on Drugs held on the 19th day of February 1925, prompted the British to impose restrictions on the sale and consumption of opium. Registered opium smokers or authorised consumers however continued to ‘enjoy’ this privilege. By 1929, the Federated Malay States had 52,313 registered opium users. A further restriction was imposed in 1934, as a result of a treaty signed in Bangkok on the use of opium. Only those who had a doctor’s recommendation were allowed to use it. By 1941, there were 75,000 opium users and it was estimated that the number of those who were not registered might well be double. After World War Two, the British prohibited the unauthorised use of opium. ... In order to prohibit the possession, use, manufacture, sale, and importation of dangerous drugs, the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1952 was promulgated by the High Commissioner with the consent of the Rulers in Council of the Federation of Malaya."// (Abdul Rani Kamarudin @  Jurnal AADK, Jilid 1, 2007: {{ :lampiran:adk-1-1.pdf ||}}[[https://www2.adk.gov.my/the-misuse-of-drugs-in-malaysia-past-and-present/|"The Misuse Of Drugs In Malaysia : Past And Present"]], m.s.4-6).+Hal ini menerima tentangan daripada sebahagian warga British sendirisejak seawal tahun 1843 lagi. Namun ianya hanya mendapat sokongan banyak pihak di Tanah Melayutermasuk daripada kalangan pentadbir British serta usahawan Cina, mulai tahun 1906: //"Buat kali pertamaisu candu di bawa ke Parlimen Britain pada 4 April 1843apabila Lord Ashley membangkitkan bantahan terhadap perdagangan candu. ... Walaupun usul tersebut tidak mendapat sebarang respons positif dari pihak kerajaan tetapi ia telah membuka jalan kepada penyokong anti-candu untuk mempersoalkan perdagangan candu secara terang-teranganDengan penubuhan sebuah pertubuhan anti-canduSociety for the Suppression of the Opium Trade (SSOT) pada tahun 1874golongan penyokong anti-candu mengharapkan pertubuhan ini mampu mengubah pendirian kerajaan. ... Pada 30 Mei 1906seorang ahli Parlimen Britain Theodore Taylor mengemukakan usul bantahan terhadap perdagangan candu dan mendesak kerajaan Britain untuk menamatkan dengan kadar segera ... Melalui pengemukaan usul bantahan tersebutbarulah kerajaan Britain mengubah polisi candunya setelah sekian lama. Keputusan positif kerajaan Britain terhadap usul Theodore Taylor menjadi suntikan semangat bagi penyokong anti-candu Britain untuk bergerak ke Tanah Melayu dalam usaha memperkukuhkan gerakan anti-candu tempatan."// (Jayakumary Marimuthu, Azmi Arifin @ E-PROCEEDINGS International Conference on SustainabilityHumanities and Civilization (ICSHAC), November 2018: {{ :lampiran:e_proceedings_international_conference_o.pdf ||}}[[https://www.academia.edu/43350749/E-PROCEEDINGS_International_Conference_on_Sustainability_Humanities_and_Civilization_ICSHAC_2018|"PEMBANTERASAN TABIAT MENCANDU DAN PERANAN GERAKAN ANTI-CANDU DI NNMB SEBELUM TAHUN 1910"]]m.s.37-38). 
 + 
 +Mulai 1910, pihak British mula mengawal selia kegiatan import, penjualan, dan pengedaran candu di Tanah Melayu, serta mengenakan cukai ke atasnya. Namun dengan cara ini mereka masih terus-menerus mendapat keuntungan di setiap peringkat: //"... In 1910, the British Government took over the importation, sale and distribution of opium. The Government licensed all retail shops, while mine owners and other large employers of Chinese labour imported their own opium, converted it into chandu, and dispensed it to their own employees. After a good many years the Government, in some states, collected their own taxes on opium, and while that policy did not make the slightest difference to the consumers, it enabled the Government to calculate this source of revenue for each successive period of three years."// (Abdul Rani Kamarudin @  Jurnal AADK, Jilid 1, 2007: {{ :lampiran:adk-1-1.pdf ||}}[[https://www2.adk.gov.my/the-misuse-of-drugs-in-malaysia-past-and-present/|"The Misuse Of Drugs In Malaysia : Past And Present"]], m.s.4). 
 +  
 +Berikutan Konvensyen Geneva 1925, ia mula dihentikan secara beransur-ansur, sehingga dilarang sepenuhnya dalam Akta Dadah Merbahaya 1952: //"The Geneva Convention on Drugs held on the 19th day of February 1925, prompted the British to impose restrictions on the sale and consumption of opium. Registered opium smokers or authorised consumers however continued to ‘enjoy’ this privilege. By 1929, the Federated Malay States had 52,313 registered opium users. A further restriction was imposed in 1934, as a result of a treaty signed in Bangkok on the use of opium. Only those who had a doctor’s recommendation were allowed to use it. By 1941, there were 75,000 opium users and it was estimated that the number of those who were not registered might well be double. After World War Two, the British prohibited the unauthorised use of opium. ... In order to prohibit the possession, use, manufacture, sale, and importation of dangerous drugs, the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1952 was promulgated by the High Commissioner with the consent of the Rulers in Council of the Federation of Malaya."// (Abdul Rani Kamarudin @  Jurnal AADK, Jilid 1, 2007: {{ :lampiran:adk-1-1.pdf ||}}[[https://www2.adk.gov.my/the-misuse-of-drugs-in-malaysia-past-and-present/|"The Misuse Of Drugs In Malaysia : Past And Present"]], m.s.5-6).
  
 {{:gambar:opiumrevenue-card.jpg?550|An authorisation card to purchase chandu (opium) from Queen Street in 1942, during the Japanese Occupation. Chew Chang Lang Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.}}{{:gambar:erb-ed1u4aey-ds.jpg?280|My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop (originally granted by the British, but these ones dating from the Japanese Government of Selangor during the Occupation), along with other family documents (including my Ah Kong's MCA membership lol).}} \\  {{:gambar:opiumrevenue-card.jpg?550|An authorisation card to purchase chandu (opium) from Queen Street in 1942, during the Japanese Occupation. Chew Chang Lang Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.}}{{:gambar:erb-ed1u4aey-ds.jpg?280|My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop (originally granted by the British, but these ones dating from the Japanese Government of Selangor during the Occupation), along with other family documents (including my Ah Kong's MCA membership lol).}} \\ 
 **Kiri**: Lesen membeli candu (zaman pendudukan Jepun): //"An authorisation card to purchase chandu (opium) from Queen Street in 1942, during the Japanese Occupation. Chew Chang Lang Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore."// (Diana S. Kim, 1 Oct 2020: {{ :laman:the_sticky_problem_of_opium_revenue.pdf ||}}[[https://biblioasia.nlb.gov.sg/vol-16/issue-3/oct-dec-2020/opium-revenue|"The Sticky Problem of Opium Revenue"]]). \\  **Kiri**: Lesen membeli candu (zaman pendudukan Jepun): //"An authorisation card to purchase chandu (opium) from Queen Street in 1942, during the Japanese Occupation. Chew Chang Lang Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore."// (Diana S. Kim, 1 Oct 2020: {{ :laman:the_sticky_problem_of_opium_revenue.pdf ||}}[[https://biblioasia.nlb.gov.sg/vol-16/issue-3/oct-dec-2020/opium-revenue|"The Sticky Problem of Opium Revenue"]]). \\ 
-**Kanan**: Lesen membeli candu (zaman pendudukan Jepun): //"My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop (originally granted by the British, but these ones dating from the Japanese Government of Selangor during the Occupation), along with other family documents (including my Ah Kong's MCA membership lol)."// (Soon-Tzu Speechley 孫子 @ Twitter, 18 Feb 2020: {{ :laman:1_soo_1.pdf ||}}[[https://twitter.com/speechleyish/status/1229621765866840064|"My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop"]]). \\ +**Kanan**: Lesen membeli candu (zaman pendudukan Jepun): //"My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop (originally granted by the British, but these ones dating from the Japanese Government of Selangor during the Occupation), along with other family documents (including my Ah Kong's MCA membership lol)."// (Soon-Tzu Speechley 孫子 @ Twitter, 18 Feb 2020: {{ :laman:1_soo_1.pdf ||}}[[https://twitter.com/speechleyish/status/1229621765866840064|"My great grandparents' opium licenses for the Government Chandu Shop"]]). 
 + 
 +[[start#pengakuan_pentingkami_bukan_ahli_sejarah|Pengakuan penting: Kami bukan ahli sejarah! Sila klik di sini untuk penjelasan lanjut.]]
candu.1626264420.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/07/14 20:07 by sazli